FrançaisEnglish

Érudit | Dépôt de documents >
CIRPÉE - Centre interuniversitaire sur le risque, les politiques économiques et l'emploi >
Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:

https://depot.erudit.org//id/001042dd

Title: Accuracy versus Falsification Costs: the Optimal Amount of Evidence under Different Procedures
Authors: Emons, Winand
Fluet, Claude
Keywords: Evidence production
Procedure
Costly state falsification
Adversarial
Inquisitorial
Issue Date: 2007-02
Series/Report no.: Cahiers du CIRPÉE;07-03
Abstract: An arbiter can decide a case on the basis of his priors or he can ask for further evidence from the two parties to the conflict. The parties may misrepresent evidence in their favor at a cost. The arbiter is concerned about accuracy and low procedural costs. When both parties testify, each of them distorts the evidence less than when they testify alone. When the fixed cost of testifying is low, the arbiter hears both, for intermediate values one, and for high values no party at all. The arbiter's ability to remain uninformed as well as sequential testifying makes it more likely that the arbiter requires evidence.
URI: http://132.203.59.36/CIRPEE/cahierscirpee/2007/files/CIRPEE07-03.pdf
https://depot.erudit.org/id/001042dd
Appears in Collections:Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE

Files in This Item:

CIRPEE07-03.pdf, (Adobe PDF ; 416.17 kB)

Items in the Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

About Érudit | Subscriptions | RSS | Terms of Use | Contact us |

Consortium Érudit ©  2016