This paper is aimed at highlighting Posner and Hayek’s consensus on the importance of decentralization, as well as the significance of the incorporation of non-legal actors as tools for facilitating the efficient allocation of resources in common law. In addition to highlighting the consensus on the views of Posner and Hayek, in respect of de centralization of information within the judicial process, this paper aims to address why de centralization serves as a vital tool in facilitating the objective of common law as an efficiency allocation mechanism. Whilst it is argued that lower court judges may not and should not be given such flexibility to make and unmake the law, the principles and decisions of law lords acting in the capacity of ...
Law and economics scholarship has been predominantly concerned with the content of legal rules rathe...
In the twentieth century, two Nobel-Prize winning economists wrote two seemingly unrelated character...
International audienceRichard Posner's "What Do Judges and Justices Maximize?" (1993a) is not, as us...
This paper is aimed at highlighting Posner and Hayek’s consensus on the importance of decentralizati...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This paper is aimed at highlighting Posner and Hayek’s consensus on the importance of decentralizati...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This Article shows how Posner and other scholars who claimed that common law was efficient misunders...
This article discusses the notion of efficient statute law. The hypothesis that the common law devel...
Economists and legal scholars in the law-and-economics tradition have long been occupied with the qu...
We analyze the efficiency and consistency of court decisions under common and civil law. As a leadin...
Our article is a methodological critique of the recent legal origins literature. We start by showing...
This is an entry for the forthcoming Second Edition of the Encyclopedia of Law and Economics (2d ed....
The claim that the common law displays an economic logic is a centerpiece of the positive economic t...
Law and economics scholarship has been predominantly concerned with the content of legal rules rathe...
In the twentieth century, two Nobel-Prize winning economists wrote two seemingly unrelated character...
International audienceRichard Posner's "What Do Judges and Justices Maximize?" (1993a) is not, as us...
This paper is aimed at highlighting Posner and Hayek’s consensus on the importance of decentralizati...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This paper is aimed at highlighting Posner and Hayek’s consensus on the importance of decentralizati...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
This Article shows how Posner and other scholars who claimed that common law was efficient misunders...
This article discusses the notion of efficient statute law. The hypothesis that the common law devel...
Economists and legal scholars in the law-and-economics tradition have long been occupied with the qu...
We analyze the efficiency and consistency of court decisions under common and civil law. As a leadin...
Our article is a methodological critique of the recent legal origins literature. We start by showing...
This is an entry for the forthcoming Second Edition of the Encyclopedia of Law and Economics (2d ed....
The claim that the common law displays an economic logic is a centerpiece of the positive economic t...
Law and economics scholarship has been predominantly concerned with the content of legal rules rathe...
In the twentieth century, two Nobel-Prize winning economists wrote two seemingly unrelated character...
International audienceRichard Posner's "What Do Judges and Justices Maximize?" (1993a) is not, as us...