Several hundred students from Israel and the United States participated in a series of between-subjects experimental surveys designed by Doron Teichman of Bar-Ilan University. The surveys measured participants' attitudes toward compliance under different conditions of legal uncertainty, manipulating the source of uncertainty between law ambiguity and enforcement likelihood. The data likely contains responses comparing compliance rates when the source of uncertainty is in the law itself versus in enforcement.
Use Cases
- Train models to predict compliance behavior based on the source of legal uncertainty.
- Analyze cross-cultural differences in legal risk perception using data from Israeli and U.S. participants.
- Study the behavioral economics of law by testing the fungibility of different legal probabilities.
Strengths
- Data is derived from a controlled, between-subjects experimental design.
- Sample includes several hundred participants from two distinct geographic regions (Israel and the United States).
Limitations
- Row count and specific column-level documentation are unknown.
- Description metadata is limited; actual data quality requires manual inspection after download.
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
Provenance
- Source
- Doron Teichman, Bar-Ilan University
- Collection Method
- Between-subjects experimental surveys with hypothetical scenarios.
- Geography
- Israel, United States