Probability Mass Functions in Forensic Economics
$25.00Gary R. Skoog and James E. Ciecka. 2011. Probability Mass Functions in Forensic Economics. Journal of Legal Economics 18(1): pp. 111-123.
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Gary R. Skoog and James E. Ciecka. 2011. Probability Mass Functions in Forensic Economics. Journal of Legal Economics 18(1): pp. 111-123.
David Schap and Andrea Thompson. 2016. Recoverable Damages for Wrongful Death in the States: A 2015 Review of Statutory Law. Journal of Legal Economics 22(2): pp. 143–153.
Gary R. Skoog and James E. Ciecka. 2012. Recursions in Forensic Economics. Journal of Legal Economics 18(2): pp. 143–160.
James E. Ciecka. 2012. Solving the Problem of Points with a Recursion. Journal of Legal Economics 18(2): pp. 129–141.
Matthew C. McCabe. 2016. The Loss of Inheritance Claim, Revisited. Journal of Legal Economics 22(2): pp. 33–64.
James E. Ciecka. 2011. The Newton-Pepys Problem, Measures of Central Tendency, and Symmetry of a Binomial Distribution.
David Schap. 2016. The Reduction for Decedent Self-Consumption: Jurisdictional Mandates for Personal Consumption or Personal Maintenance. Journal of Legal Economics 22(2): pp. 107–142.
Includes Editors notes from Journal of Legal Economics 23(1)
Harry Howe and Jeffrey W. Lippitt. 2011. Uncertainty Disclosure in Disputed Business Valuations. Journal of Legal Economics 18(1): pp. 27-47.
Thomas R. Ireland. 2011. Uses of the American Time Use Survey to Measure Household Services: What Works and Does Not Work. Journal of Legal Economics 18(1): pp. 63-79.
Victor A. Matheson, David I. Rosenbaum,, and David Schap. 2016. Wrongful Death: Who Recovers What, Where, and How? Journal of Legal Economics 22(2): pp. 25–32.
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