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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Virtuous Circle Of Distrust: A Mechanism To Deter Bribes And Other Cooperative Crimes , Robert D. Cooter, Nuno Garupa Oct 2000

The Virtuous Circle Of Distrust: A Mechanism To Deter Bribes And Other Cooperative Crimes , Robert D. Cooter, Nuno Garupa

Robert Cooter

No abstract provided.


Optimal Number Of Governments, Robert D. Cooter Aug 2000

Optimal Number Of Governments, Robert D. Cooter

Robert Cooter

No abstract provided.


Three Effects Of Social Norms On Law: Expression, Deterrence, And Internalization, Robert D. Cooter Mar 2000

Three Effects Of Social Norms On Law: Expression, Deterrence, And Internalization, Robert D. Cooter

Robert Cooter

No abstract provided.


Three Effects Of Social Norms On Law: Expression, Deterrence, And Internalization, Robert D. Cooter Dec 1999

Three Effects Of Social Norms On Law: Expression, Deterrence, And Internalization, Robert D. Cooter

Robert Cooter

State organizations suffer from agency problems that preclude effective motivation of people by formal means alone. Social norms contribute to the effectiveness of state law. Aligning law with morality creates power synergies. I analysis three of them: expression (coordination by law and morality), justification (intrinsic motivation to do what is right) , and sanctions (material costs of wrongdoing).


Does Risk To Oneself Increase The Care Owed To Others? Law And Economics In Conflict, Robert D. Cooter, Ariel Porat Dec 1999

Does Risk To Oneself Increase The Care Owed To Others? Law And Economics In Conflict, Robert D. Cooter, Ariel Porat

Robert Cooter

As applied by courts, the Hand Rule balances the injurer's burden of precaution and the victims' reduction in risk. In this application, risk to oneself does not increase the duty owed to others. Economists, however, use the Hand Rule to minimize social costs, which requires balancing the burden of precaution against the reduction in risk to everyone. For economists, risk to oneself counts in determining the duty owed to others. In cases where precaution reduces joint risk (risk to oneself and others), the usual legal interpretation underestimates the reduction in risk relative to the economic interpretation, often by 50%. The …