This paper examines the question whether adjudication can be viewed as a private good, i.e., one whose optimal level will be generated in a free market. Part I focuses on private courts, noting their limitations as institutions for dispute resolution and rule creation but also stressing the important role that the private court, in its various manifestations, has played both historically and today. Part II discusses a recent literature which has argued that the rules generated in the public court system, in areas of the law where the parties to litigation are private individuals or firms and the rules of law are judge-made, are the efficient products of purely private inputs. Our analysis suggests that this literature has overstated the ten...
The American regulatory system is unique in that it expressly relies on a diffuse set of regulators,...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.One way to end the public subsidy for cases tha...
Law in modern market societies serves both democratic and economic functions. In its economic functi...
Public law adjudication has grown dramatically in recent decades in many English-speaking countries....
Court adjudication is considered as a public good and therefore as being non-rivalrous and non-exclu...
This paper uses an ongoing issue of local legal doctrine as a case study to provide insights into a ...
In this Article, the author argues that mandatory, non-binding federal court-annexed arbitration pro...
Does the rise of international arbitration signify a retreat of the State from classical adjudicatio...
Often derided for its incoherence or uselessness, the public/private distinction is rarely studied e...
Economic activity does not always depend on state-created law (to set the rules), state-funded court...
Two developments frame this discussion: the demise of negotiated contracts as the predicate to enfor...
A simple auction-theoretic framework is used to examine symmetric litigation environments where the ...
Court adjudication is considered as a public good and therefore as being non-rivalrous and non-exclu...
The American regulatory system is unique in that it expressly relies on a diffuse set of regulators,...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.One way to end the public subsidy for cases tha...
Law in modern market societies serves both democratic and economic functions. In its economic functi...
Public law adjudication has grown dramatically in recent decades in many English-speaking countries....
Court adjudication is considered as a public good and therefore as being non-rivalrous and non-exclu...
This paper uses an ongoing issue of local legal doctrine as a case study to provide insights into a ...
In this Article, the author argues that mandatory, non-binding federal court-annexed arbitration pro...
Does the rise of international arbitration signify a retreat of the State from classical adjudicatio...
Often derided for its incoherence or uselessness, the public/private distinction is rarely studied e...
Economic activity does not always depend on state-created law (to set the rules), state-funded court...
Two developments frame this discussion: the demise of negotiated contracts as the predicate to enfor...
A simple auction-theoretic framework is used to examine symmetric litigation environments where the ...
Court adjudication is considered as a public good and therefore as being non-rivalrous and non-exclu...
The American regulatory system is unique in that it expressly relies on a diffuse set of regulators,...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...
The re-emergence in recent years of interest in the private law in and of itself, rather than as an ...