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  • 1
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Princeton [u.a.] : Princeton University Press
    Call number: PIK B 160-15-0123
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Chapter 1: It's about the Economy ; Chapter 2: The Economic Future of the World ; Chapter 3: The Double Trust Dilemma of Development ; Chapter 4: Make or Take ; Chapter 5: The Property Principle for Innovation ; Chapter 6: Keeping What You Make--Property Law ; Chapter 7: Doing What You Say--Contracts ; Chapter 8: Giving Credit to Credit--Finance and Banking ; Chapter 9: Financing Secrets--Corporations ; Chapter 10: Hold or Fold--Financial Distress ; Chapter 11: Termites in the Foundation--Corruption ; Chapter 12:Poverty Is Dangerous--Accidents and Liability ; Chapter 13: Academic Scribblers and Defunct Economists ; Chapter 14: How the Many Overcome the Few ; Chapter 15: Legalize Freedom--Conclusion
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 325 S. : graph. Darst.
    Edition: 3. print., 1. paperback print.
    ISBN: 9780691159713
    Series Statement: Kauffman Foundation series on innovation and entrepreneurship
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 2
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Princeton [u.a.] : Princeton University Press
    Call number: PIK B 030-15-0122
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Introduction ; I. Torts and Misalignments ; 1. Prices, Sanctions, and Discontinuities ; 2. The Injurer's Self-Risk Puzzle ; 3. Negligence Per Se and Unaccounted Risks ; 4. Lapses and Substitution ; 5. Total Liability for Excessive Harm ; II. Contracts and Victims' Incentives ; 6. Unity in the Law of Torts and Contracts ; 7. Anti-Insurance ; 8. Decreasing Liability Contracts and the Assistant Interest ; III. Restitution and Positive Externalities ; 9. A Public Goods Theory of Restitution ; 10. Liability Externalities and Mandatory Choices ; 11. The Relationship between Nonlegal Sanctions and Damages ; Conclusion
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 232 S. : graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9780691151595
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Economics and philosophy 5 (1989), S. 47-54 
    ISSN: 0266-2671
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Philosophy , Economics
    Notes: Basic liberty, according to Rawls's first principle of justice, is not to be sacrificed for other values such as wealth. And, according to his second principle of justice, the material well-being of the worst-off members of society is not to be sacrificed to benefit better-off members of society. These trade-offs would be unjust, according to Rawls, no matter how small the sacrifice or how large the offsetting benefit. A decision-maker conforming to Rawls's theory, who is unwilling to sacrifice some values in favor of others, has lexical preferences. Lexical preferences, however, are not encountered in studies of consumer demand for market goods. Since goods trade off within the range of choices studied in demand theory, it seems to economists that political values ought to trade off as well.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: This essay synthesizes and re-conceptualizes some central results of the economic analysis of liability law and sketches the legal details that drive them. Three different legal mechanisms for creating efficient incentives are examined in turn. The first mechanism uses the legal rule of strict liability to internalize costs. The second mechanism uses a negligence standard to create and enforce efficient standards of behavior. The third mechanism uses law to channel transactions into voluntary exchange. The initial explanation of the three mechanisms makes simplifying assumptions of perfect information, solvency, costless dispute resolution, and risk neutrality, before examining the results of relaxing these assumptions. The rules of the three major bodies of liability law—property, contracts, and torts—will be analyzed as examples within these three mechanisms. Property law concerns appropriation of ownership rights or interference with them; contract law concerns broken promises; tort law concerns accidental or intentional harm to people or property.
    Print ISSN: 0895-3309
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-7965
    Topics: Economics
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