《AUSTRIAN LAW AND ECONOMICS VOLUME II》PDF下载

  • 购买积分:21 如何计算积分?
  • 作  者:MARIO J.RIZZO
  • 出 版 社:AN ELGAR RESEARCH COLLECTION
  • 出版年份:2011
  • ISBN:184542753X
  • 页数:755 页
图书介绍:

PART Ⅰ COMMON LAW, BALANCING AND EFFICIENCY 3

1. Mario J.Rizzo (1980), ‘Law Amid Flux: The Economics of Negligence and Strict Liability in Tort’, Journal of Legal Studies, 9 (2), March, 291-318 3

2. Mario J.Rizzo (1980), ‘The Mirage of Efficiency’, Hofstra Law Review, 8 (3), Spring, 641-58 31

3. James M.Buchanan (1969), ‘Private and Social Cost’, in Cost and Choice: An Inquiry in Economic Theory, Chapter 5, Chicago, IL: Markham Publishing Company, 70-83 49

4. Peter Lewin (1982), ‘Pollution Externalities: Social Cost and Strict Liability’, Cato Journal, 2 (1), Spring, 205-29 63

5. Roy E.Cordato (1996), ‘Time Passage and the Economics of Coming to the Nuisance: Reassessing the Coasean Perspective’, Campbell Law Review, 20, 273-92 88

6. Mario J.Rizzo (1985), ‘Rules Versus Cost-Benefit Analysis in the Common Law’, Cato Journal, 4 (3), Winter, 865-84 108

PART Ⅱ RULES 131

7. Richard A.Epstein (2006), ‘Intuition, Custom, and Protocol: How to Make Sound Decisions with Limited Knowledge’, NYU Journal of Law and Liberty, 2 (1), 1-27 131

8. Douglas Glen Whitman (2009), ‘The Rules of Abstraction’, Review of Austrian Economics, 22 (1), March, 21-41 158

9. Todd J.Zywicki (1998),‘Epstein and Polanyi on Simple Rules, Complex Systems, and Decentralization’, Constitutional Political Economy, 9 (2), June, 143-50 179

PART Ⅲ SLIPPERY SLOPE ANALYSIS 189

10.Mario J.Rizzo and Douglas Glen Whitman (2003), ‘The Camel’s Nose is in the Tent: Rules, Theories, and Slippery Slopes’, UCLA Law Review, 51 (2), December, 539-92 189

11.Douglas Glen Whitman and Mario J.Rizzo (2007), ‘Paternalist Slopes’, NYU Journal of Law and Liberty, 2 (3), 411-43 243

PART Ⅳ INSTITUTIONS 279

12. L.M.Lachmann (1971), ‘On Institutions’, in The Legacy of Max Weber, Berkeley, CA: The Glendessary Press, 49-91 279

13. Karol Boudreaux and Paul Dragos Aligica (2007), ‘The Evolutionary Path’, in Paths to Property: Approaches to Institutional Change in International Development, Chapter 6, London: The Institute of Economic Affairs, 71-9, references 322

14. Karol Boudreaux and Paul Dragos Aligica (2007), ‘An Intellectual Toolbox for the Creation of Property Rights’, in Paths to Property: Approaches to Institutional Change in International Development, Chapter 8, London: The Institute of Economic Affairs, 84-99, references 333

15. David A.Harper (2003), ‘Institutions Ⅰ: Rule of Law, Property and Contract’, in Foundations of Entrepreneurship and Economic Development, Chapter 4, London and New York, NY: Routledge, 57-88, references 351

16. David A.Harper (2003), ‘Institutions Ⅱ: Money, Political and Legal Decentralisation and Economic Freedom’, in Foundations of Entrepreneurship and Economic Development, Chapter 5, London and New York, NY: Routledge, 89-126, references 386

17. Peter J.Boettke, Christopher J.Coyne and Peter T.Leeson (2007), ‘Saving Government Failure Theory from Itself: Recasting Political Economy from an Austrian Perspective’, Constitutional Political Economy, 18 (2), June, 127-43 427

PART Ⅴ MARKET CHOSEN LAW 447

18. Edward Stringham (1999), ‘Market Chosen Law’, Journal of Libertarian Studies, 14 (1), Winter 1998-1999, 53-77 447

19. Edward Stringham (2003), ‘The Extralegal Development of Securities Trading in Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam’, Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 43 (2), Summer, 321-44 472

20. Edward Stringham (2002), ‘The Emergence of the London Stock Exchange as a Self-Policing Club’, Journal of Private Enterprise, 17(2),1-19 496

21. Anthony Ogus (1999), ‘Competition Between National Legal Systems: A Contribution of Economic Analysis to Comparative Law’, International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 48 (2), April, 405-18 515

22. Peter T.Leeson (2007), ‘Trading with Bandits’, Journal of Law and Economics, 50 (2), May, 303-21 529

23. Peter T.Leeson (2007), ‘An-arrgh-chy: The Law and Economics of Pirate Organization’, Journal of Political Economy, 115 (6), 1049-94 548

PART Ⅵ MINIMIZING THE STATE 597

24. John Hasnas (2003), ‘Reflections on the Minimal State’, Politics, Philosophy and Economics, 2 (1),115-28 597

25. Peter T.Leeson (2008), ‘Coordination Without Command: Stretching the Scope of Spontaneous Order’, Public Choice, 135 (1-2), April, 67-78 611

26. Peter T.Leeson (2006), ‘Efficient Anarchy’, Public Choice, 130 (1-2),41-53 623

27. Peter T.Leeson (2008), ‘How Important is State Enforcement for Trade?’, American Law and Economics Review, 10 (1), Spring, 61-89 636

28. Walter Block and Thomas J.DiLorenzo (2000), ‘Is VoluntaryGovernment Possible? A Critique of Constitutional Economics’, Journal of Theoretical and Institutional Economics, 156 (4), December, 567-82 665

29. Randall G.Holcombe (2004), ‘Government: Unnecessary but Inevitable’, Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy, Ⅷ (3), Winter, 325-42 681

PART Ⅶ DISPERSED KNOWLEDGE AND THE LIMITS OF LAW 701

30. Mario J.Rizzo (2005), ‘The Problem of Moral Dirigisme: A New Argument Against Moralistic Legislation’, NYU Journal of Law and Liberty, 1 (2),789-843 701