The Boston Public School Match
In: American economic review, Band 95, Heft 2, S. 368-371
ISSN: 1944-7981
99 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: American economic review, Band 95, Heft 2, S. 368-371
ISSN: 1944-7981
In: American political science review, Band 90, Heft 3, S. 632
ISSN: 0003-0554
In: The Economic Journal, Band 102, Heft 413, S. 975
Written by more than fifty top researchers from economics, OR, and algorithm design, this text comprehensively covers a major inter-disciplinary field and its important applications from the basics to state of the art. Key chapters discuss efficiency, fairness and incentives, and market design and its relation to social choice theory.
In: NBER working paper series 13213
In the past, judges have often hired applicants for judicial clerkships as early as the beginning of the second year of law school for positions commencing approximately two years down the road. In the new hiring regime for federal judicial law clerks, by contrast, judges are exhorted to follow a set of start dates for considering and hiring applicants during the fall of the third year of law school. Using the same general methodology as we employed in a study of the market for federal judicial law clerks conducted in 1998-2000, we have broadly surveyed both federal appellate judges and law students about their experiences of the new market for law clerks. This paper analyzes our findings within the prevailing economic framework for studying markets with tendencies toward "early" hiring. Our data make clear that the movement of the clerkship market back to the third year of law school is highly valued by judges, but we also find that a strong majority of the judges responding to our surveys has concluded that nonadherence to the specified start dates is very substantial -- a conclusion we are able to corroborate with specific quantitative data from both judge and student surveys. The consistent experience of a wide range of other markets suggests that such nonadherence in the law clerk market will lead to either a reversion to very early hiring or the use of a centralized matching system such as that used for medical residencies. We suggest, however, potential avenues by which the clerkship market could stabilize at something like its present pattern of mixed adherence and nonadherence, thereby avoiding the complete abandonment of the current system.
In: International journal of forecasting, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 359-368
ISSN: 0169-2070
In: Transplant International 35:10551. doi: 10.3389/ti.2022.10551 (2022)
SSRN
In: NBER Working Paper No. w23265
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper