Contemporary legal thinking is in the thrall of a cult of flexibility. We obsess about avoiding decisions without all possible relevant information while ignoring the costs of postponing decisions until that information becomes available. We valorize procrastination and condemn investments of decisional resources in early decisions. Both public and private law should be understood as a productive activity converting information, norms, and decisional and enforcement capacity into outputs of social value. Optimal timing depends on changes in these inputs’ scarcity and in the value of the decision they produce. Our legal culture tends to overestmate the value of information that may become available in the future while discounting ...
In the years since September 11, 2001, scholars have advocated two main positions on the role of law...
Legal change is a fact of life, and the need to deal with it has spawned a number of complicated bod...
The article reveals the values underpinning judicial decisions in three cases in which the complexit...
Contemporary legal thinking is in the thrall of a cult of flexibility. We obsess about avoiding de...
Traditional choice of law theory conceives of certainty and flexibility as opposed values: increase ...
We develop an economic theory of “flexibility”, which we interpret as the discretion or ability to m...
A flexible law leaves a margin of discretion to the judge. In innovating an complex environments, sh...
Society is constantly changing. Because of the rapid developments in technology and related fields o...
Flexibility is usually seen as a virtue in today\u27s world. Even the dictionary seems to dislike th...
Statutes of limitation are deadlines. Although psychologists have discovered a great deal about how ...
Federal civil procedure today relies extensively on trial judge discretion to manage litigation, pro...
Administrative officials are permitted to have policies as to the exercise of their discretionary po...
All of social science is based on the assumption that people act rationally, in a logical, unemotion...
In modern society the law regulates the complex behavior of millions of people. To do this efficient...
Sometimes the rules let you change the rules. In civil procedure, many rules are famously rigid—for ...
In the years since September 11, 2001, scholars have advocated two main positions on the role of law...
Legal change is a fact of life, and the need to deal with it has spawned a number of complicated bod...
The article reveals the values underpinning judicial decisions in three cases in which the complexit...
Contemporary legal thinking is in the thrall of a cult of flexibility. We obsess about avoiding de...
Traditional choice of law theory conceives of certainty and flexibility as opposed values: increase ...
We develop an economic theory of “flexibility”, which we interpret as the discretion or ability to m...
A flexible law leaves a margin of discretion to the judge. In innovating an complex environments, sh...
Society is constantly changing. Because of the rapid developments in technology and related fields o...
Flexibility is usually seen as a virtue in today\u27s world. Even the dictionary seems to dislike th...
Statutes of limitation are deadlines. Although psychologists have discovered a great deal about how ...
Federal civil procedure today relies extensively on trial judge discretion to manage litigation, pro...
Administrative officials are permitted to have policies as to the exercise of their discretionary po...
All of social science is based on the assumption that people act rationally, in a logical, unemotion...
In modern society the law regulates the complex behavior of millions of people. To do this efficient...
Sometimes the rules let you change the rules. In civil procedure, many rules are famously rigid—for ...
In the years since September 11, 2001, scholars have advocated two main positions on the role of law...
Legal change is a fact of life, and the need to deal with it has spawned a number of complicated bod...
The article reveals the values underpinning judicial decisions in three cases in which the complexit...