This volume provides a practical answer to, among other
questions, Whither public law after the Chicago School'? Using
perspectives from American history, economic theory, and legal
analysis, the Garvey's take an interdisciplinary approach to U.S.
public law and policy--antitrust and regulation--and develop the
essential unity of the two major fields based on a clearly written
summary of pertinent microeconomic principles. They establish that
economic growth has been a primary goal of U.S. public policy
throughout the nation's history. The authors provide a thorough
critical survey of neopopulism and neoclassicism, the two major
post-war impulses in public economic law. An innovative and
concrete framework for policy development and for practical
institutional reform aimed at improving U.S. industrial
competitiveness by improving the capital allocation process is
presented here. The highly readable text is complemented by
graphics and tables for those who may want a rigorous treatment of
economic/legal concepts. The work has been extensively annotated,
especially to legal precedents and economic texts.
Law school libraries, major public libraries, libraries of law
firms, federal courts and superior state courts, as well as
university libraries will find "Economic Law and Economic Growth" a
necessary addition. This is a volume that can be productively
consulted by practicing lawyers and college/university teachers in
the fields of antitrust law, regulation--both lawyers and
economists, and public policy. An invaluable addition to courses in
antitrust and administrative law, economic policy, the regulatory
process, economic development/industrial policy, and political
economics.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!