Legal origins and the efficiency dilemma
Material type: TextSeries: Economics of legal relationships, v. 24Publication details: New York, NY Routledge 2017Description: xiii, 197 p. 24 cmISBN:- 9780367251017
- Legal origins in a nutshell – inherent dangers of its blind acceptance
- The danger of a globally accepted theory containing major flaws
- The efficiency of the common law hypothesis
- Legal origins: the comparative perspective
- The evolution of the common law and efficiency: what is the meaning of common law?
- Tort law
- Defamation law
- Professional responsibility
- Cost rules in civil litigation
- Civil juries
- Piercing the veil – application of legal origins to specific legal institutes
- Contrasting common and civil law: private law
- Contrasting common and civil law: legal governance and the specialization of courts
- Constitutional courts
- Commercial courts
- Administrative courts
- The puzzle of mixed law jurisdictions
- Contrasting common and civil law: the role of trusts and mixed legal jurisdictions
- Modern dilemmas in US and EU law as representatives of the two distinct legal families
- Contrasting civil and common law: the area of intellectual property
- Patent protection in the US and EU
- Geographic indications
- How are the US and the EU approaching the field?
- Efficiency of trademark protection in common and civil law systems
- Contrasting common and civil law: corporate law in the US and EU
- Inherent flaws of the legal origins in researching the field of corporate law: the taxonomy of countries
- Inherent flaws of the legal origins in researching the field of corporate law: coding errors
- The inherent dangers of the persisting influence of legal origins theory on the international level
- Law and economic development
- Law--Economic aspects
- 340.141 GAR
Economists advise that the law should seek efficiency. More recently, it has been suggested that common law systems are more conducive of economic growth than code-based civil law systems. This book argues that there is no theory to support such statements and provides evidence that rejects a 'one-size-fits-all' approach. Both common law and civil law systems are reviewed to debunk the relationship between the efficiency of the common law hypothesis and the alleged inferiority of codified law systems.
Legal Origins and the Efficiency Dilemma has six aims: explaining the efficiency hypothesis of the common law since Posner’s 1973 book; summarizing the legal origins theory in the context of economic growth; debunking their relationship; discussing the meaning of 'common law' and the problems with the efficiency hypothesis by comparing laws across English speaking jurisdictions; illustrating the shortcomings of the legal origins theory with a comparative law and economics analysis; and concluding there is no theory and evidence to support the economic superiority of common law systems. Based on previous pieces by the authors, this book expands their work by including new areas of analysis (such as trusts), detailing previous analysis (such as French law versus common law in the areas of contract, property and torts), and updating for recent developments in the academic discourse.
This volume is of interest to academics and students who study microeconomics, comparative law and foundations of law, as well as legal policy analysts.
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