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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Origin, Development, And Regulation Of Norms, Richard H. Mcadams
The Origin, Development, And Regulation Of Norms, Richard H. Mcadams
Michigan Law Review
For decades, sociologists have employed the concept of social norms to explain how society shapes individual behavior. In recent years, economists and rational choice theorists in philosophy and political science have started to use individual behavior to explain the origin and function of norms. For many in this group, the focus of study is the interaction of law and norms, of formal and informal rules. Exemplified by Robert Ellickson's Order Without Law, this literature uses norms to develop more robust explanations of behavior and to predict more accurately the effect of legal rules. Norms turn out to matter in legal …
Overcoming Posner, Gerard V. Bradley
Overcoming Posner, Gerard V. Bradley
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Richard A. Posner, Overcoming Law
Incommensurability And Valuation In Law, Cass R. Sunstein
Incommensurability And Valuation In Law, Cass R. Sunstein
Michigan Law Review
In this article I explore two claims and discuss their implications for law. The first claim is that human values are plural and diverse. By this I mean that we value things, events, and relationships in ways that are not reducible to some larger and more encompassing value. The second claim is that human goods are not commensurable. By this I mean that such goods are not assessed along a single metric. For reasons to be explored, the two claims, though related, are importantly different.
Judge Richard Posner's Jurisprudence, Robert S. Summers
Judge Richard Posner's Jurisprudence, Robert S. Summers
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Problems of Jurisprudence by Richard A. Posner