Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily fit the presuppositions of classical legal analysis. One reason for this is the pivotal role played in conventional legal theory by the concept of the complete contingent contract. Parties in a bargaining situation are presumed able, at minimal cost, to allocate explicitly the risks that future contingencies may cause one or the other to regret having entered into an executory agreement. Under these conditions, the role of legal regulation can be defined quite precisely. Once the underlying rules policing the bargaining process have been specified, contract rules serve as standard or common risk allocations that can be varied by the individu...
Traditionally, courts have refused to compensate disappointed bargainers for reliance costs incurred...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Contract law has neither a complete descriptive theory, explaining what the law is, nor a complete n...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The relationship between legal rules and the strategies that commercial parties use to deal with ris...
In Section I of this article, I argue that complex risk-allocation models are inconsistent in import...
Scholarly work on contracts offers a valuable lens through which exchange relationships among compan...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Modern contract law scholarship embraces a particularly strange contradiction. On one hand, most leg...
The relationship between legal rules and the strategies that commercial parties use to deal with ris...
This article sets out a normative theory to guide decisionmakers in the regulation of contracts betw...
Traditionally, courts have refused to compensate disappointed bargainers for reliance costs incurred...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Contract law has neither a complete descriptive theory, explaining what the law is, nor a complete n...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The relationship between legal rules and the strategies that commercial parties use to deal with ris...
In Section I of this article, I argue that complex risk-allocation models are inconsistent in import...
Scholarly work on contracts offers a valuable lens through which exchange relationships among compan...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Modern contract law scholarship embraces a particularly strange contradiction. On one hand, most leg...
The relationship between legal rules and the strategies that commercial parties use to deal with ris...
This article sets out a normative theory to guide decisionmakers in the regulation of contracts betw...
Traditionally, courts have refused to compensate disappointed bargainers for reliance costs incurred...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Contract law has neither a complete descriptive theory, explaining what the law is, nor a complete n...