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Articles 1 - 30 of 102
Full-Text Articles in Law
Mixed Strategy Nash Equilibrium Predictions As A Means Of Organizing Behavior In Posted-Offer Market Experiments, Bart Wilson, Douglas Davis
Mixed Strategy Nash Equilibrium Predictions As A Means Of Organizing Behavior In Posted-Offer Market Experiments, Bart Wilson, Douglas Davis
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Language Games Of Reciprocity, Bart Wilson
Strategic Buyers, Horizontal Mergers And Synergies: An Experimental Investigation, Bart Wilson, Douglas Davis
Strategic Buyers, Horizontal Mergers And Synergies: An Experimental Investigation, Bart Wilson, Douglas Davis
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Fixed Revenue Auctions, Bart Wilson, Cary Deck
Economics Works! Experiments In High School Classrooms, Bart Wilson, Stephen Jackstadt, Paul Johnson
Economics Works! Experiments In High School Classrooms, Bart Wilson, Stephen Jackstadt, Paul Johnson
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Second Chance Offers Vs. Sequential Auctions: Theory And Behavior, Bart Wilson, Timothy Salmon
Second Chance Offers Vs. Sequential Auctions: Theory And Behavior, Bart Wilson, Timothy Salmon
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
An Experimental Investigation Of Hobbesian Jungles, Bart Wilson, Benjamin Powell
An Experimental Investigation Of Hobbesian Jungles, Bart Wilson, Benjamin Powell
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Historical Property Rights, Sociality, And The Emergence Of Impersonal Exchange In Long-Distance Trade, Bart Wilson, Erik Kimbrough, Vernon Smith
Historical Property Rights, Sociality, And The Emergence Of Impersonal Exchange In Long-Distance Trade, Bart Wilson, Erik Kimbrough, Vernon Smith
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Incremental Approaches To Establishing Trust, Bart Wilson, Robert Kurzban, Mary Rigdon
Incremental Approaches To Establishing Trust, Bart Wilson, Robert Kurzban, Mary Rigdon
Bart J Wilson
No abstract provided.
Sovereign Funds: Opportunities And Concerns, Myriam Kairouz Aucar
Sovereign Funds: Opportunities And Concerns, Myriam Kairouz Aucar
Myriam Kairouz Aucar
Sovereign funds are not a new notion. But they are attracting so much attention now because of their size, their rapid growth having quadrupled in size between 2003 and 2007 , and because they are investing in the US financial market institutions. This paper will explain the Sovereign Wealth Funds, address the concerns they raise as well as their importance, and try to get a view of how to balance the need for these funds with the dangers they represent. The paper also discusses some protective measures that have been emplemeted as well as some suggested protective measures.
The Nonpecuniary Costs Of Sarbanes Oxley, Nicholas V. Vakkur
The Nonpecuniary Costs Of Sarbanes Oxley, Nicholas V. Vakkur
Nicholas v Vakkur
Sarbanes Oxley is widely considered the most comprehensive economic regulation since the New Deal. While research has evaluated its financial costs, relatively little is known about the non-financial impact of the law upon firms. We develop six hypotheses regarding the non-financial impact of Sarbanes Oxley, incorporating learning from a comprehensive literature review across multiple disciplines. To evaluate this theory, an original survey was developed and implemented on a random sample of Fortune 500 firms (n = 206). An ordered probit model was used to quantify the results. While many economists consider business surveys to be at least as important as …
If They Could Only Eat Efficiency: How Airline Deregulation And The Bankruptcy Code Joined Forces To Undermine Airline Workers And What Can Be Done About It, Ashton S. Phillips
If They Could Only Eat Efficiency: How Airline Deregulation And The Bankruptcy Code Joined Forces To Undermine Airline Workers And What Can Be Done About It, Ashton S. Phillips
Ashton S. Phillips `
As a species of mass transportation, the airline industry is incapable of making a sustained profit in an unregulated economy. Without regulation, easy access to reorganization and government subsidies only facilitate bloated supply in the air travel market. Bloated supply leads to decreased market price of airfare. This decrease helps consumers, but it doesn't help airlines achieve profitability. Under the current legal scheme, if airlines can't achieve profitability, airline workers will continue to subsidize the industry with radically decreased pay and lost retirement benefits. If Congress increases airline workers' rights in bankruptcy and merger contexts, their positions will be temporarily …
Who Needs The Stock Market? Part I: The Empirical Evidence, Lawrence E. Mitchell
Who Needs The Stock Market? Part I: The Empirical Evidence, Lawrence E. Mitchell
Lawrence E. Mitchell
Data on historical and current corporate finance trends drawn from a variety of sources present a paradox. External equity has never played a significant role in financing industrial enterprises in the United States. The only American industry that has relied heavily upon external financing is the finance industry itself. Yet it is commonly accepted among legal scholars and economists that the stock market plays a valuable role in American economic life, and a recent, large body of macroeconomic work on economic development links the growth of financial institutions (including, in the U.S, the stock market) to growth in real economic …
Institutional Arrangements, Property Rights And The Endogenity Of Comparative Advantage, Nita Ghei
Institutional Arrangements, Property Rights And The Endogenity Of Comparative Advantage, Nita Ghei
Nita Ghei
Comparative advantage is determined not merely by exogenous factor endowments. Institutional arrangements, and security of property rights, affect comparative advantage and the pattern of trade as well. Developing countries would be better off using their scarce institutional capital on securing property rights rather than trying to pick “winners” using strategic trade policy.
Governance And Accountability: The Regional Development Banks, Enrique R. Carrasco, Heejin Lee, Wesley Carrington
Governance And Accountability: The Regional Development Banks, Enrique R. Carrasco, Heejin Lee, Wesley Carrington
Enrique R Carrasco
Good governance has become a mantra of the movement seeking to make multilateral financial institutions more accountable to their stakeholders while improving institutional governance. Although much of the visible criticism has been directed at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, the “regional” development banks share many of the same governance and accountability problems. Important issues relating to governance and accountability include the banks’ heavily unequal voting power based on capital contributions, limited transparency and disclosure requirements, questionable efficacy of monitoring programs on the impact of the banks’ projects, and limited scope of the banks’ private complaint mechanisms. This Article …
A Troubled House Of Cards: Examining How The “Housing And Economic Recovery Act Of 2008” Fails To Resolve The Foreclosure Crisis, Chad Emerson
Chad Emerson
No abstract provided.
Pro Bono Publico As A Conscience Good, Deborah A. Schmedemann
Pro Bono Publico As A Conscience Good, Deborah A. Schmedemann
Deborah Schmedemann
Pro bono work performed by American lawyers serves a critical role in the American civil justice system. This paper seeks to explain pro bono through the lens of social science research into volunteering, in particular the economic concept of a conscience good. The paper presents the results of an empirical study involving over 1,100 law students and lawyers. The results include data on lawyers’ motivations to perform pro bono, the impact of various pro bono rules and invitations to perform pro bono, the satisfactions of pro bono work, emotions triggered by pro bono work and pro bono clients, and the …
Pro Bono Publico As A Conscience Good, Deborah A. Schmedemann
Pro Bono Publico As A Conscience Good, Deborah A. Schmedemann
Deborah Schmedemann
Pro bono work performed by American lawyers serves a critical role in the American civil justice system. This paper seeks to explain pro bono through the lens of social science research into volunteering, in particular the economic concept of a conscience good. The paper presents the results of an empirical study involving over 1,100 law students and lawyers. The results include data on lawyers’ motivations to perform pro bono, the impact of various pro bono rules and invitations to perform pro bono, the satisfactions of pro bono work, emotions triggered by pro bono work and pro bono clients, and the …
Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg
Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg
Ryan M. Riegg
The Role Of Private Sector Investment In International Microfinance And The Implications Of Domestic Regulatory Environments, William A. Langer
The Role Of Private Sector Investment In International Microfinance And The Implications Of Domestic Regulatory Environments, William A. Langer
William A Langer
The Role of Private Sector Investment in International Microfinance and the Implications of Domestic Regulatory Environments
By William Langer
Microfinance – the practice of providing small, working capital loans and other financial services to poor individuals unable to obtain access to commercial sources of credit – has been able to transform the lives of over 100 million microentrepreneurs and their families in various regions throughout the world. Despite this impressive achievement, microfinance currently reaches only 10% of the estimated demand for microfinance services, comprised of approximately 1 to 1.5 billion self-employed poor persons worldwide. Practitioners agree that in order to …
Comparing Judicial Compensation: Apples, Oranges, And Cherry-Picking, Matthew W. Wolfe
Comparing Judicial Compensation: Apples, Oranges, And Cherry-Picking, Matthew W. Wolfe
Matthew W. Wolfe
United States Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts describes the American judiciary as the envy of other constitutional democracies. But in one respect, the judiciary apparently trails others: judicial pay. Citing higher salaries of judges in other countries, Chief Justice Roberts and Associate Justices Stephen Breyer and Samuel Alito have all argued that inadequate judicial pay leads to a decline in judicial performance and quality. Judicial pay advocates apparently make these comparisons to emphasize that low judicial salaries “threaten” judicial quality and independence or, alternatively, that high judicial salaries “ensure” quality and independence. But the argument is incomplete, relying upon …
Dr. Miles Is Dead. Now What?: Structuring A Rule Of Reason For Evaluating Minimum Resale Price Maintenance, Thomas A. Lambert
Dr. Miles Is Dead. Now What?: Structuring A Rule Of Reason For Evaluating Minimum Resale Price Maintenance, Thomas A. Lambert
Thomas A. Lambert
In Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc., decided in 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court overruled its 1911 precedent declaring vertical minimum resale price maintenance (RPM) to be per se illegal. The Leegin Court held that the practice should instead be examined on a case-by-case basis under antitrust's rule of reason. The Court further exhorted the lower courts to craft a "structured" rule of reason for evaluating RPM. This article critiques six approaches that have been proposed for evaluating minimum RPM and offers an alternative approach. The six approaches critiqued are (1) the Brandeisian, unstructured rule of reason; (2) …
Statistical String Theory For Courts: If The Data Don't Fit..., David F. Babbel
Statistical String Theory For Courts: If The Data Don't Fit..., David F. Babbel
David F Babbel
The primary purpose of this article is to provide courts with an important new tool for applying the correct probability distribution to a given legal question. This tool is path-breaking and will have an extensive impact on how a wide variety of cases are decided. In areas as diverse as criminal prosecutions and civil lawsuits alleging securities fraud, courts must assess the relevance and reliability of statistical data and the inferences drawn therefrom. But, courts and expert witnesses often make mistaken assumptions about what probability distributions are appropriate for their analyses. Using the wrong probability distribution can lead to invalid …
Nudging For Liberty: Values In Libertarian Paternalism, Michael S. Mcpherson, Matthew A. Smith
Nudging For Liberty: Values In Libertarian Paternalism, Michael S. Mcpherson, Matthew A. Smith
Michael S. McPherson
In their recent book, Nudge, Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein argue persuasively that default rules, framing effects, etc., can be used to promote people's welfare. Through a range of empirical examples, we show that it is possible and often preferable to promote values other than welfare. For example, in certain situations default rules can be used to promote people’s exercise of liberty, the equality between citizens, or any other number of values. The core of the paper is showing that these examples do not devolve into welfare, and thereby enhancing the range of options open to policy makers.
To Hell With Kyoto, It’S Time For Something Real!, Altdus Ray Frank
To Hell With Kyoto, It’S Time For Something Real!, Altdus Ray Frank
Altdus Ray Frank
The intended gift of clean air and pristine atmosphere through the inception of the Kyoto Protocol was meant to be a measure to protect the environment for not only the present generation, but the future as well. Instead of accepting this gift, humanity has yet again showed its darker side; shredding the ambitious purpose of this document and crucifying its creators as being overzealous, overbearing fools. People must come to terms and understand that environmental catastrophe is the single greatest threat faced by humanity today.
It is time for a new dawn, a new era where, the global community has …
Maximizing Social Influence To Minimize Carbon Emissions: Law And Social Norms In Collective Action, Jed S. Ela
Maximizing Social Influence To Minimize Carbon Emissions: Law And Social Norms In Collective Action, Jed S. Ela
Jed S Ela
Legal scholars have long argued that informal social norms can solve collective action problems, as long as these problems occur in close-knit groups. This “group knittedness hypothesis” may suggest that social norms, by themselves, will not be able to solve the world’s largest collective action problem: anthropogenic climate change. Yet recent scholarship has taken the group knittedness hypothesis too far, suggesting that any attempt to manage social influences in large, loose-knit groups is likely to be relatively ineffective.
In fact, social norms can shape individual behavior even in loose-knit groups, and climate policies that ignore norms may miss important opportunities …
Implications Of The Uk Companies Act 2006 For Institutional Investors And The Corporate Social Responsibility Movement, Gordon L. Clark, Eric R. W. Knight
Implications Of The Uk Companies Act 2006 For Institutional Investors And The Corporate Social Responsibility Movement, Gordon L. Clark, Eric R. W. Knight
Eric R Knight
Non-governmental organisations, activists, and the public-at-large hold large firms accountable on many issues including their environmental footprints and the social standards of their suppliers around the world. For those coming from European social democratic traditions, stakeholders have a legitimate voice in the affairs of the corporation especially in two-tiered governance regimes that separate supervision from management. Notwithstanding attempts to re-write their proper roles and responsibilities, the Anglo-American corporation is widely believed to be the medium for the accumulation of shareholder value.
Recently, however, a counter-argument has emerged suggesting that the UK Companies Act 2006 broke with this tradition to embrace …
Midnight Regulations And Regulatory Review, Jerry Brito
Midnight Regulations And Regulatory Review, Jerry Brito
Jerry Brito
The term “midnight regulations” describes the dramatic spike of new regulations promulgated at the end of presidential terms, especially during transitions to an administration of the opposite party. As commentators have pointed out, this phenomenon is problematic because it is the result of a lack of presidential accountability during the midnight period—the time after the November election and before Inauguration Day. Midnight regulations, however, present another problem that receives little attention. It is the prospect that an increase in the number of regulations promulgated in a given time-period could overwhelm the institutional review process that serves to ensure that new …
Deeply And Persistently Conflicted: Credit Rating Agencies In The Current Regulatory Environment, Timothy E. Lynch
Deeply And Persistently Conflicted: Credit Rating Agencies In The Current Regulatory Environment, Timothy E. Lynch
Timothy E. Lynch
Credit rating agencies have a pervasive and potentially devastating influence on the financial well-being of the public. Yet, despite the recent passage of the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act, credit rating agencies enjoy a relative lack of regulatory oversight. One explanation for this lack of oversight has been the appeal of the potentially self-regulating nature of credit rating agencies that claim to rely deeply on their reputational standing within the financial world. There are strong arguments for doubting this reputational concern, including the conflicting self-interest of credit rating agencies whose profits are gained or lost depending on their ability to …
Loco Labels And Marketing Madness: Improving How Consumers Interpret Information In The American Food Economy, Margaret Sova Mccabe
Loco Labels And Marketing Madness: Improving How Consumers Interpret Information In The American Food Economy, Margaret Sova Mccabe
Margaret Sova McCabe
America's current food labeling scheme, as illustrated by the example of salt, is flawed when examined from the consumer and public health perspective. While the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act has sound scientific standards, those standards as currently applied to labels do not efficiently signal health information to consumers. Without better information on labels, consumers will continue to make poor choices at the grocery store. However, there are promising new ways to label. Both the United Kingdom and the domestic supermarket chain Hannaford’s have implemented simple health labeling on food packaging or grocery shelves to improve the amount and location …