PART Ⅰ GENERAL APPROACHES 3
1. Richard A. Epstein (1997), ‘The Modern Uses of Ancient Law’,South Carolina Law Review, 48 (2), Winter, 243-65 3
2. Saul Levmore (1986), ‘Rethinking Comparative Law: Variety and Uniformity in Ancient and Modern Tort Law’, Tulane Law Review, 61 (2), December, 235-87 26
3. Richard A. Posner (1983), ‘A Theory of Primitive Society, with Special Reference to Law’, Journal of Law and Economics,23(l), 1-53 79
PART Ⅱ LIABILITY SYSTEMS 135
4. Francesco Parisi and Giuseppe Dari-Mattiacci (2004), ‘The Rise and Fall of Communal Liability in Ancient Law’, International Review of Law and Economics, 24, 489-505 135
5. Francesco Parisi (2001), ‘The Genesis of Liability in Ancient Law’, American Law and Economics Review, 3 (1), Spring,82-124 152
6. Saul Levmore (1995), ‘Rethinking Group Responsibility and Strategic Threats in Biblical Texts and Modern Law’, Chicago-Kent Law Review, 71, 85-121 195
PART Ⅲ FAMILY LAW 235
7. Maristella Botticini and Aloysius Siow (2003), ‘Why Dowries?’,American Economic Review, 93 (4), September, 1385-98 235
8. Rick Geddes and Paul J. Zak (2002), ‘The Rule of One-Third’,Journal of Legal Studies, XXXI (1, Part 1), January, 119-37 249
PART Ⅳ LAND LAW 271
9. M.I. Finley (1953), ‘Land, Debt, and the Man of Property in Classical Athens’, Political Science Quarterly, LXVIII(2), June,249-68 271
10. Robert C. Ellickson and Charles DiA. Thorland (1995), ‘Ancient Land Law: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Israel’, Chicago-Kent Law Review, 71, 321-411 291
11. Francesco Parisi (2004), ‘The Origins and Evolution of Property Rights Systems’, in Enrico Colombatto (ed.), The Elgar Companion to the Economics of Property Rights, Chapter 3,Cheltenham and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing,64-84 382
PART Ⅴ CRIMINAL LAW 405
12. James Lindgren (1996), ‘Why the Ancients May Not Have Needed a System of Criminal Law’, Boston University Law Review, 76, 29-57 405
13. Thomas J. Miceli and Kathleen Segerson (2007), ‘Punishing the Innocent along with the Guilty: The Economics of Individual versus Group Punishment’, Journal of Legal Studies, 36 (1),January, 81-106 434
PART Ⅵ COMMERCIAL LAW 463
14. David Daube (1979), ‘Money and Justiciability’, Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung fur Rechtsgeschichte, 96, 1-16 463
15. Geoffrey P. Miller (1993), ‘Contracts of Genesis’, Journal of Legal Studies, XXII (1), January,15-45 479
16. Geoffrey P. Miller (1993), ‘Ritual and Regulation: A Legal-Economic Interpretation of Selected Biblical Texts’, Journal of Legal Studies, XXII(2), June, 477-501 510
PART Ⅶ ECONOMIC MARKETS AND INSTITUTIONS 537
17. Peter Temin (2001), ‘A Market Economy in the Early Roman Empire’, Journal of Roman Studies, 91 (2), 169-81 537
18. Keith Sharfman (2007), ‘The Law and Economics of Hoarding’, Loyola Consumer Law Review, 19 (2), 179-93 550
19. Henry Hansmann, Reinier Kraakman and Richard Squire (2006),‘Law and the Rise of the Firm’, Harvard Law Review, 119 (5),March, 1333-403 565
PART Ⅷ BANKRUPTCY AND RISK 639
20. Robert J. Aumann (2003), ‘Risk Aversion in the Talmud’,Economic Theory, 21, 233-9 639
21. Robert J. Aumann and Michael Maschler (1985), ‘Game Theoretic Analysis of a Bankruptcy Problem from the Talmud’, Journal of Economic Theory, 36 (2), August, 195-213 646
PART Ⅸ CONSTITUTIONAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE LAW 667
22. Robert K. Fleck and F. Andrew Hanssen (2006), ‘The Origins of Democracy: A Model with Application to Ancient Greece’,Journal of Law and Economics, ⅩLIⅨ (1), April, 115-46 667
23. Geoffrey P. Miller (1995), ‘J as Constitutionalist: A Political Interpretation of Exodus 17:8-16 and Related Texts’, Chicago-Kent Law Review, 70, 1829-47 699
24. Adam S. Chodorow (2007), ‘Biblical Tax Systems and the Case for Progressive Taxation’, Journal of Law and Religion, XXIII,51-96 718