Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursued a changing mix of retaliatory, punitive and compensatory objectives. In this paper, we consider the historical transition from retaliatory to punitive justice, and the subsequent transition from punitive to compensatory justice. This paper shows how the optimal level of enforcement varies under the three corrective regimes. Crimes that create a larger net social loss require lower levels of enforcement under retaliatory regimes. The optimal level of enforcement is instead independent of the degree of inefficiency of the crime when punitive and compensatory remedies are utilized. The paper provides several historical illustrations and sheds li...
The authors characterize optimal enforcement in a setting in which individuals can select among vari...
The article focuses on legitimation and limitation factors of Enlightenment’s punishment theories. T...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursued ...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursue...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursue...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Justifications for the use of punitive damages refer to deterrence and punishment. After formulating...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Generalising doctrines of a »criminal legal historical« character on act and delinquent only very in...
In ancient Egypt the punishment had public character. Capital punishments and corporal punishments w...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
Deterrence has long been considered one of the most important goals of both tort law and criminal la...
The authors characterize optimal enforcement in a setting in which individuals can select among vari...
The article focuses on legitimation and limitation factors of Enlightenment’s punishment theories. T...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursued ...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursue...
Ancient laws addressed all types of wrongdoing with a single set of remedies that over time pursue...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Justifications for the use of punitive damages refer to deterrence and punishment. After formulating...
Both ancient Roman and contemporary American tort law recognize a type of damages that, instead of c...
Generalising doctrines of a »criminal legal historical« character on act and delinquent only very in...
In ancient Egypt the punishment had public character. Capital punishments and corporal punishments w...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
Deterrence has long been considered one of the most important goals of both tort law and criminal la...
The authors characterize optimal enforcement in a setting in which individuals can select among vari...
The article focuses on legitimation and limitation factors of Enlightenment’s punishment theories. T...
This volume critically explores the basis and the goal of punishment from the standpoint of the righ...