We consider a government’s interrelated decisions of enacting laws prohibiting harmful behavior and choosing how aggressively to enforce those laws. There are three broad policies available to the government in this regard: not prohibiting the act at all, enacting a law and enforcing it, and enacting a law and not enforcing it. When enactment is costly and a fraction of the population reflexively complies with the law once its enactment has been announced (reflecting an expressive function of law), all three policies may be optimal, depending on the severity of the harm from the act and the fraction of reflexive compliers
The conventional economic literature on law enforcement provides no satisfactory explanation for the...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
This paper contains the chapters on public enforcement of law and on criminal law from a general, fo...
textabstractGiven the threats of our current 'risk society', there is an ever-increasing demand for ...
The harm caused by many acts is not certain but probabilistic. Cur-rent public enforcement of the la...
This article surveys the theory of the public enforcement of law--the use of public agents (inspecto...
The authors characterize optimal enforcement in a setting in which individuals can select among vari...
Recent comparative law and economics literature utilizes quantitative methods to evaluate the effect...
Economic analysis of law usually proceeds under the assumptions of neoclassical economics. But empir...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
In contrast to the traditional legal commentary, I find nuisance law to be a coherent body of rules ...
Theories of regulation are many. No single theory however explains the observed contrasts in regulat...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
This thesis considers a situation in which an economic agent has an incentive to not comply with the...
The conventional economic literature on law enforcement provides no satisfactory explanation for the...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
This paper contains the chapters on public enforcement of law and on criminal law from a general, fo...
textabstractGiven the threats of our current 'risk society', there is an ever-increasing demand for ...
The harm caused by many acts is not certain but probabilistic. Cur-rent public enforcement of the la...
This article surveys the theory of the public enforcement of law--the use of public agents (inspecto...
The authors characterize optimal enforcement in a setting in which individuals can select among vari...
Recent comparative law and economics literature utilizes quantitative methods to evaluate the effect...
Economic analysis of law usually proceeds under the assumptions of neoclassical economics. But empir...
The law and economics literature on punishment reveals strong reasons of efficiency to adopt an extr...
In contrast to the traditional legal commentary, I find nuisance law to be a coherent body of rules ...
Theories of regulation are many. No single theory however explains the observed contrasts in regulat...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
This thesis considers a situation in which an economic agent has an incentive to not comply with the...
The conventional economic literature on law enforcement provides no satisfactory explanation for the...
It is a widely accepted conclusion of the economic literature on optimal law enforcement that nonmon...
This paper contains the chapters on public enforcement of law and on criminal law from a general, fo...