This welcome work argues that government is the result of a
contract arrived at by individuals with varying bargaining power.
Holcombe explores such issues as why the political system protects
individual's rights, why individuals agree to political
institutions that give their governments extensive power, and why
even the most powerful government benefits from constitutional
rules which constrain its power. He arrives at a theory of rights,
constitutions, and government that does not rely, as economists
have traditionally done, on value judgments. Very much at the
cutting edge of economic thinking, this book will interest
undergraduates and professionals in the fields of economics,
political science, and government.
General
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