We study strategic behavior by private litigants when courts’ judgments are inalienable in the sense that it is unlawful to contract around them ex post. Inalienable judgments arise in many contexts, including antitrust, labor law, intellectual property law, unfair competition, and various types of public interest litigation. We show that inalienability systematically creates incentives for problematic rent-seeking behaviors: strategic investments intended to influence the outcome of litigation and collusive ex ante settlements that enrich the parties at the public’s expense. These problems arise because the parties generally have asymmetric stakes, and asymmetric stakes affect strategic behavior differently when judgments are inalienable. ...
We consider a model of litigation in which some defendants have insufficient assets to pay a judgmen...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
We study strategic behavior by private litigants when courts’ judgments are inalienable in the sense...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
Private antitrust litigation often involves a dominant firm being accused of exclusionary conduct by...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
Economic analysts of remedies often use nuisance cases as examples to illustrate their models. The i...
none2noLitigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics liter...
This paper develops a theoretical account of presumptions, focusing on their capacity to mediate bet...
In this Article, we suggest that litigation can be analyzed as though it is a competitive research a...
When firms collude and charge supra-competitive prices, consumers can bring antitrust lawsuits again...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Litigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics literature o...
We consider a model of litigation in which some defendants have insufficient assets to pay a judgmen...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
We study strategic behavior by private litigants when courts’ judgments are inalienable in the sense...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
We model rent seeking in litigation in weak legal systems as a Tulloch contest in which litigators m...
Private antitrust litigation often involves a dominant firm being accused of exclusionary conduct by...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
Economic analysts of remedies often use nuisance cases as examples to illustrate their models. The i...
none2noLitigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics liter...
This paper develops a theoretical account of presumptions, focusing on their capacity to mediate bet...
In this Article, we suggest that litigation can be analyzed as though it is a competitive research a...
When firms collude and charge supra-competitive prices, consumers can bring antitrust lawsuits again...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Litigation aims at resolving conflicts. In this chapter we survey the law and economics literature o...
We consider a model of litigation in which some defendants have insufficient assets to pay a judgmen...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...