ABSTRACT

The Law and Economics approach to law dominates the intellectual discussion of nearly every doctrinal area of law in the United States and its influence is growing steadily throughout Europe, Asia, and South America. Numerous academics and practitioners are working in the field with a flow of uninterrupted scholarship that is unprecedented, as is its influence on the law.

Academically every major law school in the United States has a Law and Economics program and the emergence of similar programs on other continents continues to accelerate. Despite its phenomenal growth, the area is also the target of an ongoing critique by lawyers, philosophers, psychologists, social scientists, even economists since the late 1970s. While the critique did not seem to impede the development of the field, it certainly has helped it to become more sophisticated, inclusive, and mature. In this volume some of the leading scholars working in the field, as well as a number of those critical of Law and Economics, discuss the foundational issues from various perspectives: philosophical, moral, epistemological, methodological, psychological, political, legal, and social. 

The philosophical and methodological assumptions of the economic analysis of law are criticized and defended, alternatives are proposed, old and new applications are discussed.

The book is ideal for a main or supplementary textbook in courses and seminars on legal theory, philosophy of law, jurisprudence, and (of course) Law and Economics.

chapter 2|16 pages

Flawed foundations

The philosophical critique of (a particular type of) economics

chapter 4|26 pages

The dominance of norms

chapter 5|20 pages

From dismal to dominance?

Law and economics and the values of imperial science, historically contemplated

chapter 6|15 pages

Beyond the law-and-economics approach

From dismal to democratic

chapter 7|17 pages

Functional law and economics

The search for value-neutral principles of lawmaking

chapter 8|38 pages

Law and economics

Systems of social control, managed drift, and the dilemma of rent-seeking in a representative democracy

chapter 12|19 pages

Moral externalities

An economic approach to the legal enforcement of morality

chapter 13|22 pages

Engagement with economics

The new hybrids of family law/law and economics thinking

chapter 15|58 pages

Behavioral law and economics

Its origins, fatal flaws, and implications for liberty