RT Article T1 The promise of behavioral economics for understanding decision‐making in the court JF Criminology & public policy VO 18 IS 4 SP 785 OP 805 A1 Wilson, Theodore LA German YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1682138240 AB Decision‐making scholars often limit their purview to the decision to offend, whereas sentencing scholars focus on court case processing within administrative data sets. What is missing between these two camps is an incorporation of the sanctioning process into offender decision‐making and an integration of relevant findings from offender decision‐making and behavioral economics into courtroom actor decision‐making. In this article, I highlight several specific concepts from behavioral economics that can be applied to the court and interpret existing sentencing research in light of these same behavioral economic concepts. K1 Decision making K1 Court K1 Sanctioning process DO 10.1111/1745-9133.12461