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Just Exchange:

A Theory of Contract
Front Cover
1 Review
Routledge, Jun 1, 2004 - Business & Economics - 224 pages

Now, for the first time, there is a comprehensive, eminently readable book designed to focus thinking in the area of contract law. This book bridges the gap between law and economics by confronting normative values that economists too often deem the preserve of moral philosophers. Contract theorists, on the other hand, are seldom in sympathy with economic efficiency norms. While free bargaining continues to be regarded with suspicion by legal scholars who are hostile to private ordering, the proper scope of free bargaining remains in dispute. Combined with a recent renewed interest in this field, these academic tensions mean that the time is right for a reconsideration of contract law.

Drawing on scholarship from diverse fields and using illuminating and erudite examples, Just Exchange is entertaining as well as informative. Of interest to economists, lawyers, public policy-makers and those intersted in contract theory, this volume is a valuable overview of a vital intersection between legal studies and economics.

  

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Review: Just Exchange: A Theory of Contract

User Review  - Honeycarmel - Goodreads

The concept sounded great. But, it is unbelievable. Someone who studies history and teaches history BUT doesn't get it that he could change the past. He also doesn't get it that he is with a nun! I got way too irritated. I had to stop reading this book it was longer interesting or fun. Read full review

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About the author (2004)

F. H. Buckley is Foundation Professor at the Law and Economics Center of George Mason University in Arlington, Virginia.

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