100 research outputs found
Debating Lawâs Irrelevance: Legal Scholarship and the Coase Theorem in the 1960s
Ronald Coaseâs classic article, The Problem of Social Cost, is widely credited with playing a significant role in the development of the economic analysis of lawâone of the most influential new movements in legal scholarship in the last third of the twentieth century. The traditional history here is that this impact came via two routes: one, through the effect of Coaseâs article in stimulating economists to analyze issues that had traditionally been the province of legal scholars (that is, Coase as a stimulus for âeconomics imperialismâ); and two, through Coaseâs impact on the thinking of Richard Posner, who was moved to examine the efficiency of common law rules in part by his encounter with Coaseâs remarks regarding the propensity of judges to make decisions that accorded with economistsâ sensibilities. While each of these historical claims is true enough, the lines of scholarship that they reference commenced only in the 1970s. The genesis of the application of Coaseâs insightsâand, in particular, the negotiation result that came to be known as the âCoase theoremââto legal issues came in the first half of the 1960s, and significantly, the roots of this work lie in the legal community, rather than the economics community
Cultures of Expertise and the Public Interventions of Economists
The essays in this volume examine the economist as public intellectual. Rather than assessing the changing status of the public intellectual in culture or attempting to define the identity of the public intellectual, our approach is to study the public interventions of economists, that is, the encounters between economists and their publics. In the volume we constrain ourselves to the long twentieth century in the United States and the United Kingdom, fenced at one end by the Progressive Era and Fabianism and the ongoing economic crisis at the other. Economists then and now have been occupants of the public sphere, and to understand their encounters with the public we must appreciate the expectations they bring to the meeting and the institutional contexts that enable the encounters. The unifying claim of our collection is that economistsâ public interventions have been of profound consequence for both the structure and the content of the public sphere.</jats:p
Introduction to Economics as a Public Science. Part II: Institutional Settings
This issue of Ćconomia contains the second set of essays that emerged from the conference âEconomics and Public Reasonâ hosted in May 2018 at the Centre Walras-Pareto for the History of Economic and Political Thought at the University of Lausanne.Ce numĂ©ro dâĆconomia contient la seconde sĂ©rie dâessais issue de la confĂ©rence « Economics and Public Reason » qui a Ă©tĂ© organisĂ©e en mai 2018 par le Centre Walras Pareto dâĂ©tudes interdisciplinaires de la pensĂ©e Ă©conomique et politique Ă lâUniversitĂ© de Lausanne
Introduction to Economics as a Public Science
This short article introduces readers to the papers published in this issue on the theme of âpublic reasonâ in economics. It provides ground to the notion of âpublic reasonâ in economics as a two-way process taking place in interstitial spaces between economics, as an academic discipline, and the various publics in which economicsâits concepts, tools, and methodsâ acquires meaning as an instrument of social understanding and political change
Economics Imperialism in Law and Economics
Non peer reviewe
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