Many questions left unanswered in that class, and in torts literature generally, like the reason for the scope of employment limitation on master-servant liability, seemed to me easy ones from even a simplistic economic perspective. Why, then, not look at torts law, indeed at all of law, from that perspective and see what one might learn
Professor Coase\u27s article, The Problem of Social Cost, played a significant role in launching the...
Guido Calabresi famously argues that tort law occupies the normative space between contract law on t...
Teachers, scholars and practitioners have long appreciated the symbiotic relationship of torts and i...
Many questions left unanswered in that class, and in torts literature generally, like the reason for...
In their excellent new casebook on Torts Professors Gregory and Kalven state that the central polic...
In 1960 I walked into an office at The University of Chicago Law School. There I found Walter Blum a...
Professor Cooter has written an interesting and provocative paper but it constitutes an introduction...
The essays in this issue are often generous both in their interpretation of my book and their critic...
Guido Calabresi\u27s The Costs of Accidents is unquestionably the most important book written in tor...
[T]he failure to have all the relevant tests described in one place, at the time when product liabil...
In 1996, the late Brian Simpson criticised the legal competence of the discussion of the nineteenth ...
This essay summarizes high points in torts scholarship and case law over a period of two generations...
The birth of the Law and Economics movement is usually dated to the early 1960s and linked to the pu...
Contract and tort law have usually been doctrinally separated. The dominant phenomenon of social reg...
In this Article, the author critiques Prof. Sugarman\u27s tort reform proposal. While agreeing with ...
Professor Coase\u27s article, The Problem of Social Cost, played a significant role in launching the...
Guido Calabresi famously argues that tort law occupies the normative space between contract law on t...
Teachers, scholars and practitioners have long appreciated the symbiotic relationship of torts and i...
Many questions left unanswered in that class, and in torts literature generally, like the reason for...
In their excellent new casebook on Torts Professors Gregory and Kalven state that the central polic...
In 1960 I walked into an office at The University of Chicago Law School. There I found Walter Blum a...
Professor Cooter has written an interesting and provocative paper but it constitutes an introduction...
The essays in this issue are often generous both in their interpretation of my book and their critic...
Guido Calabresi\u27s The Costs of Accidents is unquestionably the most important book written in tor...
[T]he failure to have all the relevant tests described in one place, at the time when product liabil...
In 1996, the late Brian Simpson criticised the legal competence of the discussion of the nineteenth ...
This essay summarizes high points in torts scholarship and case law over a period of two generations...
The birth of the Law and Economics movement is usually dated to the early 1960s and linked to the pu...
Contract and tort law have usually been doctrinally separated. The dominant phenomenon of social reg...
In this Article, the author critiques Prof. Sugarman\u27s tort reform proposal. While agreeing with ...
Professor Coase\u27s article, The Problem of Social Cost, played a significant role in launching the...
Guido Calabresi famously argues that tort law occupies the normative space between contract law on t...
Teachers, scholars and practitioners have long appreciated the symbiotic relationship of torts and i...