Markets, Morals, and the Law

Jules L Coleman author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:19th Sep '02

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Markets, Morals, and the Law cover

This collection of essays by one of America's leading legal theorists is unique in its scope: It shows how traditional problems of philosophy can be understood more clearly when considered in terms of law, economics and political science. There are four sections in the book. The first offers a new version of legal positivism and an original theory of legal rights. The second section critically evaluates the economic approach to law, and the third considers the relationship of justice to liability for unintentional harms and to the practice of settling disputes rather than fully litigating them. Finally, Coleman explores formal social choice in democratic theory, the relationship between market behaviour and voting, and the view that morality itself, like law, is a solution of the problem of market failure. This book will be of cardinal importance to philosophers of law, legal theorists, political scientists, and economists.

Coleman certainly gets one thinking ... wide ranging. * Legal Week *
Review from previous edition This wide-ranging series of essays, representing the work of many years, conducts a thoughtful and stimulating dialogue with economic analysts of law and other legal and political theorists on subjects ranging from legal positivism to the settlement of civil cases out of court. * Judge Richard A. Posner, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit *
In Jules Coleman's essays, two rich fields of enquiries - how to understand law, and how far economic models apply to non-market institutions - are brought together and illuminated by one of the outstanding contemporary practitioners of legal philosophy. * David Gauthier, Distinguished Service Professor of Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh *

ISBN: 9780199253609

Dimensions: 234mm x 154mm x 22mm

Weight: 639g

414 pages