Print Edition

Author: Guest Author

Print Edition

The Essential Role of Empirical Analysis in Developing Law and Economics Theory

PDF Download

Throughout its history, the development of theoretical law and economics has depended on, and been shaped by, empirical analyses of law. Theoretical law and economics scholars cannot draw persuasive positive or normative conclusions about legal rules unless the models employed accurately capture the factors affecting people’s responses to legal rules. Models thus must accurately describe […]

Print Edition

The Economics of Class Action Waivers

PDF Download

Many firms require consumers, employees, and suppliers to sign class action waivers as a condition of doing business with the firm, and the U.S. Supreme Court has endorsed companies’ ability to block class actions through mandatory individual arbitration clauses. Are class action waivers serving the interests of society or are they facilitating socially harmful business […]

Notice & Comment

On “NPU-ness,” by David Singh Grewal

*This is the tenth post in a symposium on Morgan Ricks, Ganesh Sitaraman, Shelley Welton, and Lev Menand’s “Networks, Platforms, and Utilities: Law and Policy.” For other posts in the series, click here. The arrival of the first new casebook on regulated industries—what its authors call “Network, Platform, and Utility” (NPU) law—in a quarter century is […]

Print Edition

Economic Analysis in Law

PDF Download

This Essay explores the relationship between normative law and economics and legal theory. We claim that legal theory must account for law’s coerciveness, normativity, and institutional structure. Economic analyses that engage these features are an integral part of legal theory, rather than external observations about law from an economic perspective. These analyses, or economic analysis […]

Print Edition

Remixing Resources

PDF Download

This Essay argues for an approach to resource access that connects rather than separates questions of efficiency and distribution. It proceeds from the premise that putting together the most valuable combinations of resources—including human capital—is of central and increasing normative importance. Structuring law to facilitate these combinations should be a primary task for property scholars […]

Notice & Comment

The Political Economy of NPU Law, by Amy Kapczynski

*This is the ninth post in a symposium on Morgan Ricks, Ganesh Sitaraman, Shelley Welton, and Lev Menand’s “Networks, Platforms, and Utilities: Law and Policy.” For other posts in the series, click here. One of the things that constituted the neoliberal era in law schools was a mainstreaming of a very particular view about markets. Markets […]

Print Edition

Transactions Benefits

PDF Download

At least since Ronald Coase, law and economics has been deeply engaged with transactions costs. These frictions can prevent resources from being efficiently deployed in production and goods from reaching their highest-valuing users. The systematic study of how to reduce or minimize transactions costs has yielded explanations, for example, of the boundary between the firm […]

Notice & Comment

Money and Banking through the “Networks, Platforms, & Utilities” Lens: Preliminary Thoughts, by Saule T. Omarova

*This is the eighth post in a symposium on Morgan Ricks, Ganesh Sitaraman, Shelley Welton, and Lev Menand’s “Networks, Platforms, and Utilities: Law and Policy.” For other posts in the series, click here. Writing a law textbook is a huge task. Writing a textbook that takes a panoramic view of multiple substantive issues and areas of […]

Print Edition

The Boundaries of Normative Law and Economics

PDF Download

Normative law and economics remains controversial decades after its emergence despite its successes in legal scholarship and its similarity to influential approaches in economics. The reason is that many of its proponents have exaggerated its value for policy while discounting other methods, tainting the enterprise. Normative law and economics as a method of policy analysis […]

Notice & Comment

What Are Networks, Platforms, and Utilities and What Should We Do with Them? by Josh Macey and Genevieve Lakier

*This is the seventh post in a symposium on Morgan Ricks, Ganesh Sitaraman, Shelley Welton, and Lev Menand’s “Networks, Platforms, and Utilities: Law and Policy.” For other posts in the series, click here. Networks, Platforms and Utilities (NPU) is an ambitious book.It covers an enormous range of industries and regulatory frameworks—everything from banking to the postal […]

Print Edition

Economic Challenges for the Law of Contract

PDF Download

This Essay introduces general equilibrium theory (GET) and mechanism design theory (MD) in a general sense (rather than in piece meal applications) to the study of contract law. As a positive matter, this introduction reveals three understudied areas: (i) when the equilibrium contract is individually rational but collectively irrational; (ii) the role of courts in […]

Notice & Comment

NPU and the Long Interregnum, by William Boyd

*This is the sixth post in a symposium on Morgan Ricks, Ganesh Sitaraman, Shelley Welton, and Lev Menand’s “Networks, Platforms, and Utilities: Law and Policy.” For other posts in the series, click here. When I went to law school, after having spent years studying the political economy of particular industries (energy, forest products, chicken processing, agricultural […]