“…Armed with better theories, better data, and more sophisticated methodological instruments, these studies have demonstrated the importance of an individual's background characteristics in judicial decision-making. For example, we have findings that men decide sex discrimination cases differently when there are women on the appeals panel (Boyd, Epstein, and Martin 2010), that judges with daughters are more likely to take a liberal or feminist position in gender-related cases (Glynn and Sen 2015), that black judges are more likely to support affirmative-action programs than non-black judges (Kastellec 2013), that judges with prior criminal defense experience had different responses to the adoption of federal sentencing guidelines than those without (Sisk, Heise, and Morriss 1998), that judges with prior service in the executive branch were more likely to support the president in separation of powers cases (Robinson 2012), and that judges who had been public defenders differ in their sentencing practices from those who had not (Harris and Sen 2022).…”