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Economics of Lawmaking

Edited by Francesco Parisi · Vincy Fon
Oxford University Press USA March 2009

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780195374155
Publisher
Oxford University Press USA
Publication
March 2009
Format
Hardback , 352 pages
Jurisdiction
U.S. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • There is a literature on the effects of different types of legal systems, but this book will provide the only resource discussing their origin.
  • This book is an essential research and reference tool for law and economics scholars and is expected to be widely cited
  • Lawmaking has never been approached from a law and economics point of view. The authors analyze four different methods of lawmaking: lawmaking through legislation; lawmaking through adjudication; lawmaking through practice; and lawmaking through agreement.

The Economics of Lawmaking explores the relative advantages and limits of alternative sources of law. Professors Francesco Parisi and Vincy Fon view the sources of law through a law and economics lens, and consider the important issue of institutional design in lawmaking. They consider the respective advantages and proper scope of application of four fundamental sources of law: legislation, judge-made law, customary law, and international law. The defining features of these four sources of law are examined using the formal methods of public choice theory: lawmaking through legislation; lawmaking through adjudication; lawmaking through practice; and lawmaking through agreement. 

This book begins by examining the sources of law dependent on collective political decision-making, such as legislation. Multiple issues are considered, such as optimal specificity of law, optimal timing of legal intervention and optimal territorial scope of law, and include a thorough discussion on the sources of law derived from judges' decisions, such as common law. Parisi and Fon provide an extensive study on the roles of litigation and judicial path-dependence on judge-made law, biases in the evolution of legal remedies through litigation, and the effect of alternative doctrines of legal precedent, such as stare decisis and jurisprudence constante. They also consider the customary sources of law, with special attention on the mechanisms that determine their emergence and evolution, and explore sources of law derived from international treaties and conventions. The Economics of Lawmaking is the first systematic law and economics treatment of this field and will shed new light on the process of lawmaking.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction

PART I: Lawmaking through Legislation: Codified Law
Chapter 1. Lawmaking through Legislation: An Introduction
Chapter 2. Optimal Specificity of Laws: Rules versus Standards
Chapter 3. Optimal Timing of Legal Intervention: Lawmaking under Uncertainty
Chapter 4. Optimal Territorial Scope of Laws: Subsidiarity and Legal Harmonization

PART II: Lawmaking through Adjudication: Judge-Made Law
Chapter 5. Lawmaking through Adjudication: An Introduction
Chapter 6. Litigation and the Evolution of Legal Remedies
Chapter 7. Judicial Path-Dependence and Legal Change
Chapter 8. Theories of Legal Precedent: Stare Decisis and Jurisprudence Constante

PART III: Lawmaking through Practice: Customary Law
Chapter 9. Lawmaking through Practice: An Introduction
Chapter 10. Fostering the Emergence of Customary Law
Chapter 11. Customary Law and Articulation Theories
Chapter 12. Stability and Change in Customary Law

PART IV: Lawmaking through Agreement: Treaty Law
Chapter 13. Lawmaking through Agreement: An Introduction
Chapter 14. Formation and Accession to Treaties
Chapter 15. Ratification and Reservations: The Effects of Reciprocity
Chapter 16. The Hidden Bias of Treaty Law

Conclusions

About the Author

Francesco Parisi is a Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School and a Professor of Economics at the University of Bologna, Department of Economics. In 2002, he was appointed Professore Ordinario per Chiara Fama at the University of Milan (Statale) where he held a Chair in Private Law. From 1993 to 2006, he taught at George Mason University where he served as Professor of Law & Director of the Law and Economics Program and as an Associate Director of the J.M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy. Professor Parisi received his D.Jur. degree from the University of Rome "La Sapienza", an LL.M., a J.S.D. and an M.A. degree in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley and a Ph.D in Economics from George Mason University. He is the author of ten books and over one-hundred and fifty papers in the field of law and economics. Professor Parisi currently serves as Editor-in-Chief of theReview of Law and Economics and the Supreme Court Economic Review. He is a member of the board of editors of the International Review of Law and Economics, the journal of Public Choice, and the American Journal of Comparative Law. 

Vincy Fon teaches Economics at the George Washington University and received her PhD in economics from the University of Kansas. Her research areas include law and economics and applied microeconomics. Among other courses, she teaches graduate microeconomics, undergraduate law and economics, and undergraduate game theory. She has served as a program director in the economics program at the National Science Foundation and as a consultant for the World Bank.

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