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While realist approaches towards judicial decision-making have become predomi-nant, their appropriateness is much less obvious for specialized or technical fieldsof law, such as patent litigation, and evidence is much scarcer than for generalistcourts. Addressing this scarcity, the paper assesses judge-level variation in deci-sion outcomes based on a sample of 1,722 collegial decisions on patent validity atthe German Federal Patent Court. Using a Bayesian mixed membership multilevelmodel, we find that after controlling for variation due to other contextual factors,there remains significant statistical variation in the propensity to nullify a patent atthe level of individual judges. However, judge effects are relatively weak and uncer-tain, indicating mitigation of individual deviation through collegiality. We concludeby discussing the relevance of consistent judicial outcomes beyond the studied con-text and especially in transnational harmonization processes, such as initialized bythe recent establishment of the Unified Patent Court.
Hoffmann et al. (Fri,) studied this question.