RT Article T1 Appellate and trial court caseload growth: A pooled time-series-cross-section analysis JF Journal of quantitative criminology VO 3 IS 2 SP 143 OP 167 A1 Moody, Carlisle E. A1 Marvell, Thomas B. A2 Marvell, Thomas B. LA English YR 1987 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1764279026 AB This is an econometric study of factors behind filing growth since 1970 in state trial courts and, especially, appellate courts. The model posits two categories of variables: those affecting the supply of disputes and those affecting the costbenefit considerations of potential litigants. The study uses a pooled time-seriescross-section design and a fixed-effects regression procedure. The overall conclusion is that factors determining the supply of disputes overwhelm other factors entered in the model. At the trial level, economic conditions 2 years earlier strongly affect civil filings, and crime rates for the current and prior year have moderate impacts on criminal filings. The output capacity of trial courts, measured by the number of judges, has a strong impact on appeals. Economic conditions and trial court filings influence civil appeals in later years, and prison commitments influence criminal appeals. The great majority of cost-benefit factors, such as simplification of appellate procedure and interest-rate differentials, showed little or no impact on appeals. K1 pooled time series-cross section K1 econometric methods K1 Economic Change K1 Appeals K1 Courts DO 10.1007/BF01064213