Public choice economics is often criticized by its critics not primarily for its lack of empirical content, but more often from its incomplete view of human nature; i.e., its “cynicism.” Even supporters seem to implicitly accept the critics’ view of public choice as only allowing a view of government from a selfish perspective. In this article, I will examine the biblical basis for the fundamental assumption of public choice: that individuals act according to their self-interest, whether in the public or the private sector. I will argue that a true view of human nature will include the biblical view of humankind as both created in the image of God and yet fallen. There is nothing inherent in a public choice framework that prevents a correct...
Constitutional principles are sometimes invoked in adjudication as a bridge to foreign law. This art...
Academic literature recognizes that firms in different countries deal with Corporate Social Responsi...
Blog post to AEA365, a blog sponsored by the American Evaluation Association (AEA) dedicated to high...
Public choice economics is often criticized by its critics not primarily for its lack of empirical c...
This review asks whether observers can obtain information about others' intentions from observation ...
Arguing that much of Africa’s recent economic boom has been confined to unsustainable growth in prim...
Macroeconomic policy should be evaluated, he says, and devised according to sustainability criteria ...
What would happen if cost benefit analysis were applied to disclosure regulations? Mandated disclosu...
This article argues that corporate legal scholarship needs to focus primarily upon the indeterminacy...
In this paper we analyse discursive struggles over what is referred to as legal and illegal user pra...
This thesis analyzes the doctrines of justification in the Roman Catholic John Henry Newman (1801‐18...
In this chapter, we draw on social practice theory framings of energy use (and other resource consum...
This article examines the 2007 banking crisis from an interdisciplinary and, in particular, social c...
Many political theorists, philosophers, social scientists, and other academics engage in political a...
This paper investigates the effectiveness of voluntary clawback provisions as a deterrent for earnin...
Constitutional principles are sometimes invoked in adjudication as a bridge to foreign law. This art...
Academic literature recognizes that firms in different countries deal with Corporate Social Responsi...
Blog post to AEA365, a blog sponsored by the American Evaluation Association (AEA) dedicated to high...
Public choice economics is often criticized by its critics not primarily for its lack of empirical c...
This review asks whether observers can obtain information about others' intentions from observation ...
Arguing that much of Africa’s recent economic boom has been confined to unsustainable growth in prim...
Macroeconomic policy should be evaluated, he says, and devised according to sustainability criteria ...
What would happen if cost benefit analysis were applied to disclosure regulations? Mandated disclosu...
This article argues that corporate legal scholarship needs to focus primarily upon the indeterminacy...
In this paper we analyse discursive struggles over what is referred to as legal and illegal user pra...
This thesis analyzes the doctrines of justification in the Roman Catholic John Henry Newman (1801‐18...
In this chapter, we draw on social practice theory framings of energy use (and other resource consum...
This article examines the 2007 banking crisis from an interdisciplinary and, in particular, social c...
Many political theorists, philosophers, social scientists, and other academics engage in political a...
This paper investigates the effectiveness of voluntary clawback provisions as a deterrent for earnin...
Constitutional principles are sometimes invoked in adjudication as a bridge to foreign law. This art...
Academic literature recognizes that firms in different countries deal with Corporate Social Responsi...
Blog post to AEA365, a blog sponsored by the American Evaluation Association (AEA) dedicated to high...