Big Data permeates our society, but how will it affect U.S. courts? In civil litigation, attorneys and experts are increasingly reliant on analyzing of large volumes of electronic data, which provide information and insight into legal disputes that could not be obtained through traditional sources. There are limitless sources of Big Data: time and payroll records, medical reimbursements, stock prices, GPS histories, job openings, credit data, sales receipts, and social media posts just to name a few.  Experts must navigate complex databases and often messy data to generate reliable quantitative results. Attorneys must always keep an eye on how such evidence is used at trial. Big Data analyses also present new legal and public policy challenges in areas like privacy and cybersecurity, while advances continue in artificial intelligence and algorithmic design.  For these and many other topics, Employstats has a roadmap on the past, present, and future of Big Data in our legal system.

Order your copy of Dr. Dwight Steward and Dr. Roberto Cavazos’ book on Big Data Analytics in U.S. Courts!

Complex wage and hour litigation often involves significant data management and sophisticated analyses in order to assess potential liability and damages. This article highlights common wage and hour data management issues, sampling and surveying, as well as provides a case study as an example of the use of sampling in an overtime misclassification case.

Download Dr. Dwight Steward and Matt Rigling’s paper on wage and hour expert economists here!

Economics and Statistics Experts in Wage and Hour Litigation