Publicação:
Judicial attitudes under shifting jurisprudence : evidence from Brazil’s new drug law of 2006

dc.contributor.authorCastro, Alexandre Samy de
dc.coverage.spatialBrasilpt_BR
dc.coverage.temporal2006pt_BR
dc.date.accessioned2021-05-27T14:20:27Z
dc.date.available2021-05-27T14:20:27Z
dc.date.issued2021-05
dc.date.portal2021-05
dc.description.abstractThis paper exploits the diversity of panels at the court of appeals in the state of São Paulo to address the role of career backgrounds and ideology in shaping the response of judicial decisions to a major shift in jurisprudence on drug offenses. The Brazilian constitution reserves 80% of the seats in appellate courts to career judges, 10% to lawyers and 10% to prosecutors. In practice however, vacancies in panels coupled with backlogs have significantly increased participation of judges sitting by designation in appellate panels - who acted as rapporteurs in as much as 14% of all criminal appeals in Sao˜ Paulo, between 2009-2013. Former lawyers and prosecutors are appointed by the state governor after nomination processes at the bar association and at the ministerial office. Judges sitting by designation are chosen at the discretion of the court’s highest council and do not retain prerogatives of tenured appellate judges and are typically hired with the purpose of reducing backlogs. Their performance affects their chances of being promoted to the court of appeals, relatively to similar judges that have not been designated. Based on a large dataset of criminal appeals related to drug offenses in the State São Paulo, Brazil, this study exploits the exogenous assignment of cases to rapporteurs, to identify the causal effects of career backgrounds on the response of appellate judges to a major shift in drug jurisprudence, which revoked the prohibition of conversion of confinement punishment in drug offenses introduced by the new drug law of 2006. Estimates of treatment-effects, conditional on case characteristics and panel-specific fixed-effects, confirm that career judges respond favorably to defendants, in line with the jurisprudence shift. Former prosecutors react against the shift, responding unfavorably to defendants. Former lawyers tend to exhibit a mixed behavior, weighing in their preferences as well as strategically favoring predominant “law and order” views. Finally sitting judges behave in a diffident fashion but also favoring prosecution.pt_BR
dc.description.other40 p. : il.pt_BR
dc.description.otherSérie monográfica: Discussion Paper ; 256pt_BR
dc.description.otherPossui referências bibliográficaspt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorio.ipea.gov.br/handle/11058/10610
dc.language.isoengpt_BR
dc.location.countryBRpt_BR
dc.publisherInstituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea)pt_BR
dc.rightsAcesso Abertopt_BR
dc.rights.holderInstituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea)pt_BR
dc.rights.licenseReproduction of this text and the data it contains is allowed as long as the source is cited. Reproductions for commercial purposes are prohibited.pt_BR
dc.rights.typeLicença Comumpt_BR
dc.subject.keywordJudicial desisionspt_BR
dc.subject.keywordJudicial biaspt_BR
dc.subject.keywordJudges sitting by designationpt_BR
dc.subject.keywordDrug offensespt_BR
dc.subject.keywordJurisprudence regimespt_BR
dc.subject.vcipeaDireito conforme a área de Aplicaçãopt_BR
dc.titleJudicial attitudes under shifting jurisprudence : evidence from Brazil’s new drug law of 2006pt_BR
dc.title.alternativeDiscussion Paper 256 : Judicial attitudes under shifting jurisprudence : evidence from Brazil’s new drug law of 2006pt_BR
dc.title.alternativeAtitudes judiciais sob mudança de jurisprudência : evidências da nova lei de drogas do Brasil em 2006pt_BR
dc.typeWorking paperpt_BR
dspace.entity.typePublication
ipea.classificationDireito. Legislaçãopt_BR

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