Law's Limits : Rule of Law and the Supply and Demand of Rights
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Using the context of supply and demand, Komesar affers an analysis of rights in general and property rights in particular in the demand for and supply of the limited resources of law and the courts....For readers interested in a more provocative approach to understanding the nexus between law and society, this book will prove illuminating. Graduate level and above." Choice
Book Description
Focusing on U.S. property rights law and the notions of private property and the Rule of Law, this book paints an unconventional picture of law and rights in general. Law and rights shift and cycle as systematic factors like increasing numbers and complexity produce tough institutional choices and unexpected combinations of goals and institutions, such as private property best protected by the unconstrained political process and communitarian values best achieved through exit and atomistic markets. These forces also frustrate attempts to export the U.S. image of rights. Although there may be an important role for law, rights and courts both in the U.S. and abroad, it can not be easily defined. This book proposes a way to define that role and to change the way we look at law.
Law's Limits : Rule of Law and the Supply and Demand of Rights,Neil K. Komesar,Cambridge University Press,0521806291,Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice,Jurisprudence,Land use,Law,Law and legislation,Legal Reference / Law Profession,Right of property,Rule of law,United States,Economics, Finance, Business and Industry,Foundations of law,Law / Jurisprudence,POLITICS & GOVERNMENT,Right of property--United States,Sociology, Social Studies
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