The superior efficiency of the common law has long been a staple of the law and economics literature. Generalizing from this claim, the legal origins literature uses cross-country empirical research to attempt to demonstrate this superiority by examining economic growth rates and the presence of common law legal systems. We argue that this literature fails to adequately characterize the relevant legal variables and that its reliance on broad-brush labels like “common law” and “civil law” is inappropriate. In this Article, we first examine the efficiency literature’s claims about the common law and find that it fails to accurately account for important distinctions across common law legal systems and under-specifies key terms. We next turn t...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making l...
The Article documents that the general failure of the nineteenth century movement to codify American...
The superior efficiency of the common law has long been a staple of the law and economics literature...
Our article is a methodological critique of the recent legal origins literature. We start by showing...
The efficiency of the common law hypothesis has generated a large bulk of literature in the last dec...
This article discusses the notion of efficient statute law. The hypothesis that the common law devel...
This Article shows how Posner and other scholars who claimed that common law was efficient misunders...
Many legal economists have suggested that the common law system is more conducive to economic growth...
Law and economics is a leading contender in challenging the doctrinalism that has dominated legal re...
Economists and legal scholars in the law-and-economics tradition have long been occupied with the qu...
This is an entry for the forthcoming Second Edition of the Encyclopedia of Law and Economics (2d ed....
This paper presents a variation on the Rubin-Priest theory of the evolution of common law rules to...
Common law concepts have fallen into disrepute among legal theorists. The rise of Legal Realism in t...
The United States, it is said, is a common law country. The genius of American common law, according...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making l...
The Article documents that the general failure of the nineteenth century movement to codify American...
The superior efficiency of the common law has long been a staple of the law and economics literature...
Our article is a methodological critique of the recent legal origins literature. We start by showing...
The efficiency of the common law hypothesis has generated a large bulk of literature in the last dec...
This article discusses the notion of efficient statute law. The hypothesis that the common law devel...
This Article shows how Posner and other scholars who claimed that common law was efficient misunders...
Many legal economists have suggested that the common law system is more conducive to economic growth...
Law and economics is a leading contender in challenging the doctrinalism that has dominated legal re...
Economists and legal scholars in the law-and-economics tradition have long been occupied with the qu...
This is an entry for the forthcoming Second Edition of the Encyclopedia of Law and Economics (2d ed....
This paper presents a variation on the Rubin-Priest theory of the evolution of common law rules to...
Common law concepts have fallen into disrepute among legal theorists. The rise of Legal Realism in t...
The United States, it is said, is a common law country. The genius of American common law, according...
This paper is aimed at highlighting how common law has evolved over the centuries, namely through th...
Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making l...
The Article documents that the general failure of the nineteenth century movement to codify American...