We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators may seek to influence the court directly through bribery as well as through the merit of the legal case that they bring. If the local firm has a competitive advantage in influencing the court then there is a strategic asymmetry between the players: the local firm regards expenditure by the foreign firm as a strategic complement, but the for-eign firm regards local expenditure as a strategic substitute. This leads to different attitudes to commitment: the local firm would like to commit to a high level of effort to influence the court, the foreign firm to a low one. There is also an asymmetry in the commitment technology. It is not easy to comm...
I use formal models to probe the aphorism “Hard cases make bad law.” The analysis illuminates import...
In rent-seeking contests, players are seldom identical to one another. In this chapter, we examine t...
Gordon Tullock's critique of the Common law runs against much of the conventional wisdom in the law ...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
This paper uses insights from the literature on rent-seeking contests toanalyze the expenditure deci...
We analyze a litigation contest in which plaintiff and defendant seek to win in trial court, and the...
This paper examines the problem of renegotiation of infrastructure concessions in Latin America usin...
Litigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics literature o...
none2noLitigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics liter...
We study strategic behavior by private litigants when courts’ judgments are inalienable in the sense...
This paper provides an economic model of "cause lawyering. " Each period an interest group...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
By the conventional view, case outcomes are largely the product of courts\u27 application of law to ...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
Abstract Gordon Tullock critiques two specific aspects of the common law system: the ad-versary syst...
I use formal models to probe the aphorism “Hard cases make bad law.” The analysis illuminates import...
In rent-seeking contests, players are seldom identical to one another. In this chapter, we examine t...
Gordon Tullock's critique of the Common law runs against much of the conventional wisdom in the law ...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
This paper uses insights from the literature on rent-seeking contests toanalyze the expenditure deci...
We analyze a litigation contest in which plaintiff and defendant seek to win in trial court, and the...
This paper examines the problem of renegotiation of infrastructure concessions in Latin America usin...
Litigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics literature o...
none2noLitigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics liter...
We study strategic behavior by private litigants when courts’ judgments are inalienable in the sense...
This paper provides an economic model of "cause lawyering. " Each period an interest group...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
By the conventional view, case outcomes are largely the product of courts\u27 application of law to ...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
Abstract Gordon Tullock critiques two specific aspects of the common law system: the ad-versary syst...
I use formal models to probe the aphorism “Hard cases make bad law.” The analysis illuminates import...
In rent-seeking contests, players are seldom identical to one another. In this chapter, we examine t...
Gordon Tullock's critique of the Common law runs against much of the conventional wisdom in the law ...