General courts,specialized courts,and the complementarity effect |
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Authors: | Ehud Guttel Alon Harel Yuval Procaccia |
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Affiliation: | 1. Bora Laskin Profesor of Law, and a member of the Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality, Hebrew University Faculty of Law, 91905 Jerusalem, Israel;2. Phillip and Estelle Mizock Professor of Law, and a member of the Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality, Hebrew University Faculty of Law, 91905 Jerusalem, Israel;3. Harry Radzyner Law School, Reichman University (IDC Herzliya), 4610101 Herzliya, Israel |
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Abstract: | Among the major decisions any legal system must make is deciding whether to establish general courts with broad jurisdiction, or specialized courts with limited jurisdiction. Under one influential argument—advanced by both judges and legal theorists—general courts foster coherence within the legal system. This Article identifies a distinct effect of establishing general courts: the “complementarity effect.” In the case of complementarity, general courts strategically apply different principles in different fields, such that litigants losing in one sphere (e.g., public law) are compensated in another (e.g., private law). We support this conjecture by analyzing three case studies. |
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Keywords: | combat immunity equality freedom of expression general and specialized courts public and private law |
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