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This paper revisits the path by which Coase developed the result now known as the Coase theorem, including the famous meeting at the home of Aaron Director during which Coase 'converted' a group of Chicago economists to his way of thinking. Drawing on published and archival sources, we discuss...
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One Friday afternoon a dozen or so years ago I sat in on a freshman honors seminar led by one of my colleagues. This weekly seminar featured guest speakers from various walks of life, and that week's speaker was a state legislator who happened to be a member of the Republican party. At one point...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014339804
In 1965, Henry Manne convinced the Association of American Law Schools and the American Economic Association to establish an ad hoc Joint Committee to explore the possibilities of collaborative efforts between economists and legal scholars. This paper examines the origins and activities of this...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014339805
This paper examines the evolving role played by the Coase theorem over the several editions of Richard Posner's Economic Analysis of Law. In doing so, the paper shows both the grounding of Posner's efficiency norm in the theorem's logic and his increasing emphasis on the theorem's invariance...
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The present paper revisits the path by which Coase came to set down the result now generally known as the Coase theorem in his 1960 article. I draw on both the published record and archival resources in an effort to clear away some of the mist and, as it will emerge, dispel some of the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012593294