This article explores key insights that economic theory can shed on the issue of no-fault divorce in the United States, addressing modifications in the incentive structure of individuals that resulted from the legislative reforms of the 1970s. After stressing the importance of correctly interpreting and classifying divorce laws, this work investigates the contributions of the theory of property rights, the contributions of game theory and intra-household bargaining, and the contributions of general equilibrium analysis in our understanding of how divorce laws work and what their impact is. By doing so, this exposé analyzes the theoretical consequences of no-fault divorce on the decision whether to get married or divorced, on the characteris...
The purpose of this Article is to challenge these erroneous assumptions, that fault is no longer an...
Chapter 1: Specialization, marriage gains and divorce risk. This chapter presents a two-period barga...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
Abstract. This article explores key insights that economic theory can shed on the issue of no-fault ...
This paper investigates the impact of no-fault divorce laws on marriage and divorce in the United St...
The Coase Theorem suggests that married couples will divorce if and only if doing so increases their...
The Coase Theorem suggests that married couples will divorce if and only if doing so increases their...
Chapter one: a theory of rational marriage and divorce . The decisions to marry and, possibly, to di...
Why do people get married? Love, sex, children, money. Why do they get divorced? Probably for the sa...
The first chapter develops a theoretical model of marriage and divorce. The model has two periods an...
Divorce laws regulate when divorce is allowed and establish each spouse’s property rights over house...
U.S. divorce laws underwent revolutionary changes during the 1970s as most states adopted no-fault d...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
For those interested in the mechanisms of conjugal separation, the article by Cécile Bourreau-Dubois...
The purpose of this Article is to challenge these erroneous assumptions, that fault is no longer an...
Chapter 1: Specialization, marriage gains and divorce risk. This chapter presents a two-period barga...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
Abstract. This article explores key insights that economic theory can shed on the issue of no-fault ...
This paper investigates the impact of no-fault divorce laws on marriage and divorce in the United St...
The Coase Theorem suggests that married couples will divorce if and only if doing so increases their...
The Coase Theorem suggests that married couples will divorce if and only if doing so increases their...
Chapter one: a theory of rational marriage and divorce . The decisions to marry and, possibly, to di...
Why do people get married? Love, sex, children, money. Why do they get divorced? Probably for the sa...
The first chapter develops a theoretical model of marriage and divorce. The model has two periods an...
Divorce laws regulate when divorce is allowed and establish each spouse’s property rights over house...
U.S. divorce laws underwent revolutionary changes during the 1970s as most states adopted no-fault d...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...
For those interested in the mechanisms of conjugal separation, the article by Cécile Bourreau-Dubois...
The purpose of this Article is to challenge these erroneous assumptions, that fault is no longer an...
Chapter 1: Specialization, marriage gains and divorce risk. This chapter presents a two-period barga...
At the end of the 1960s, the U.S. divorce laws underwent major changes and the divorce rate more tha...