Professor Joo Jae Woo from the Department of Business Administration at Kookmin University's College of Business participated in a judge training program and delivered a lecture to judges. Professor Joo introduced examples of behavioral economics found in everyday life and explained the human characteristics underlying each case, aiming to enhance understanding of human nature to aid in judicial decision-making. Particular interest was generated by the case study from the University of Chicago's Criminal Lab, which proposed behavioral economics techniques to encourage compliance with court appearance orders among citizens who fail to appear.
This judicial training program is part of the career-specific training programs conducted by the Judicial Research and Training Institute. Lectures are delivered not only by judges from the National Court Administration and professors from law schools, but also by CEOs of AI companies and art enterprises, all contributing to enhancing judges' decision-making capabilities.
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