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This book offers an analytic history of Britannia (first England
and Wales and then Great Britain) over eight hundred years of
political turmoil, intermingled with economic stagnation, followed
by the engine of the industrial revolution. The book draws on
economics, political science, public choice, philosophy and the law
to probe in depth into the evolution of Britannia from an
impoverished feudal and then post-feudal autocracy into a
constitutional monarchy with limited suffrage that provided the
fulcrum for industrial and commercial success, making Britannia, by
1884, the richest nation, per capita, on the planet. The book
challenges head-on the Whiggist liberal notion of Macaulay and
Trevelyan that the path from oppression to freedom was one of
unimpeded progress. Among its novel features, the book draws upon
the dictator's handbook, as modeled by Bueno de Mesquita and
Alistair Smith to evaluate the period of varying autocracy,
1066-1688. The book draws upon modern public choice theory and
legal history to evaluate the fragile, corrupt constitutional
monarchy that oversaw the initial phase of post-Glorious Revolution
Britannia, 1689-1775. At each stage, the philosophical battle
between those who sought order and unity and those who sought
individual liberty is meticulously outlined. The book draws on the
contributions of the Scottish Enlightenment (Hume, Ferguson and
Smith) and of classical liberal philosophy (John Stuart Mill) to
explain the final vault of Britannia from a weak and corrupt to a
robust and admired constitutional monarchy grounded on the rule of
law, over the period 1776-1884.
The Economics of Budget Deficits provides a comprehensive overview
of the scholarly literature exploring the causes and consequences
of deficit spending and the public debt. Incorporating classical,
Keynesian and public choice analyses of debt-financed public
expenditures, the two volumes contain major theoretical and
empirical contributions to the debate. They cover such critical
fiscal policy issues as the history and measurement of budget
deficits, the question of who bears the burden of the public debt,
the use of deficits to solve problems of dynamic policy
inconsistency and the relative effectiveness of fiscal rules and
constitutional constraints as mechanisms for achieving budget
balance. The editors provide an authoritative introduction to the
two volumes and separate overviews of each of the seven parts. The
Economics of Budget Deficits is an indispensable reference for all
scholars and students interested in fiscal policy and for all
policymakers.
This impressive book brings together four essays, which along with
an insightful introduction from Charles Rowley, provide a robust
defence of the concept of classical liberalism in modern 'civil'
society. In the first essay, Douglas Rasmussen and Douglas Uyl
discuss the basic approaches and principles of liberalism in the
post-modern age and show how a moral philosophy can serve to
support a political philosophy. They supply a clear, fundamental
defence of liberalism in an era which has become sceptical of its
doctrines. This is followed by Peter Ordeshook's authoritative
analysis of the foundations of democracy, in relation to the demise
of communist ideology, particularly in the former Soviet Union.
Paul Rubin then examines, from a libertarian perspective, the
differing methods and degrees of success of adapting contract law
in Russia, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland in the wake of
political change. Finally, Mwangi S. Kimenyi provides an original
study of highly centralized, unitary systems of government and the
breakdown of civil society in Sub-Saharan Africa. He argues
persuasively that institutional reform involving decentralization
and federalism can better accommodate ethnic diversity in the area.
With contributions from some of the most eminent scholars in the
field, Classical Liberalism and Civil Society provides a rigorous
justification of classical liberal polity.
This book is a key example of the emergence of public choice theory
by an economist who was to become one of its major exponents. It
combines a detailed, critical study of the Monopolies Commission,
with an analysis of the economic issues involved in monopoly
supervision and control.
This final volume of 'The Selected Works of Gordon Tullock' series,
presents an eclectic mix of essays by Gordon Tullock. The first
three sections highlight his pioneering application of rational
choice theory to fields outside the usual purview of economics,
including criminal behaviour, sociobiology, and behaviour in
non-human societies. The final four sections, all concerned with
more traditional areas of economics, still show Tullock at his
innovative best, challenging conventional thinking in such fields
as public finance and monetary economics.
This unique collection of largely unpublished papers brings
together the founding fathers of law and economics to provide their
own views on the origins and intellectual history of the field. Law
and economics emerged as a separate field of scholarship during the
early 1960s, fueled by two seminal papers, one by Ronald Coase and
one by Guido Calabresi. The ideas generated by scholars researching
in the field have deeply influenced the major disciplines of
economics and the law. These 16 essays (including three by Nobel
Laureates in Economic Sciences) provide an impressive blend of
differing experiences and varying perspectives, reflecting on the
intellectual foundations of the field, its early struggles for
recognition, and its remarkable advance during the last four
decades of the twentieth century, and into the twenty-first. The
essays clearly outline, and contribute new insights into, all of
the central issues of this still vibrant research programme. A
unifying theme of the book is the central importance attached by
each scholar to scientific analysis, rather than to any particular
ideology or dogma. This book provides an absorbing intellectual
history of law and economics, and will be a fascinating read for
academics and researchers with an interest in law and economics,
the history of economic thought, public choice and public policy.
This book offers an analytic history of Britannia (first England
and Wales and then Great Britain) over eight hundred years of
political turmoil, intermingled with economic stagnation, followed
by the engine of the industrial revolution. The book draws on
economics, political science, public choice, philosophy and the law
to probe in depth into the evolution of Britannia from an
impoverished feudal and then post-feudal autocracy into a
constitutional monarchy with limited suffrage that provided the
fulcrum for industrial and commercial success, making Britannia, by
1884, the richest nation, per capita, on the planet. The book
challenges head-on the Whiggist liberal notion of Macaulay and
Trevelyan that the path from oppression to freedom was one of
unimpeded progress. Among its novel features, the book draws upon
the dictator’s handbook, as modeled by Bueno de Mesquita and
Alistair Smith to evaluate the period of varying autocracy,
1066-1688. The book draws upon modern public choice theory
and legal history to evaluate the fragile, corrupt constitutional
monarchy that oversaw the initial phase of post-Glorious Revolution
Britannia, 1689-1775. At each stage, the philosophical battle
between those who sought order and unity and those who sought
individual liberty is meticulously outlined. The book draws on the
contributions of the Scottish Enlightenment (Hume, Ferguson and
Smith) and of classical liberal philosophy (John Stuart Mill) to
explain the final vault of Britannia from a weak and corrupt to a
robust and admired constitutional monarchy grounded on the rule of
law, over the period 1776-1884.
In this book, Tullock focuses attention on the organisation of
science, raising important questions about scientific inquiry and
specifically about the problems of science as a social system.
Tullock poses such questions as: how do scientists engage in
apparently co-operative contributions in the absence of hierarchic
organisation and why are scientific contributions worthy, for the
most part, of the publics trust? Throughout The Organization of
Inquiry, Tullock answers these questions and many more through a
pioneering exploration of the interrelationship between economics
and the philosophy of science, much of which had defied
then-conventional wisdom. Anyone interested in scientific endeavour
will find the combination of Tullocks powerful logic, his sharp
forensic skills, and his barbed wit elucidating and helpful.
This is the fourth volume in Liberty Funds "The Selected Works of
Gordon Tullock". This volume includes some of Gordon Tullocks most
noteworthy contributions to the theory and application of public
choice, which is a relatively new science that links economics and
political action. This volume combines the best parts of two of his
books, Private Wants: Public Means and On Voting, as well as his
famous monograph The Vote Motive. The common thread is the
importance of the bond between Homo politicus and Homo economicus:
they are the same species, each driven largely by self-interest in
vigorous pursuit of such personal objectives as wealth, power,
prestige, and income security within the confines of society. "The
Economics of Politics" covers such diverse public choice topics as:
the nature and origins of public choice, the power of using
economic analysis to understand and predict the behaviour of
politically influenced markets, and an evaluation of voting rules
and political institutions. Equally confident in both the normative
and the positive branches of the discipline, and well-versed in the
wide variety of institutions and practices of democracy throughout
history, Tullock takes the reader on a journey that goes well
beyond the conventional horizon of public choice.
This is the inaugural volume in a new series, Liberty Fund's The
Selected Works of Gordon Tullock. The series will consist of ten
volumes of selections from the major monographs and scholarly
papers published by Tullock between 1954 and 2002. The first volume
contains a selection from Tullock's published academic papers and
essays designed to introduce the series and to offer a
representative picture of his work to allow scholars to evaluate in
depth the relevance and intellectual impact of his contributions.
The volume begins with the only two pieces in the Selected Works
that were not written by Tullock himself. The first is the brief
assessment of Tullock's contributions made by Mark Blaug in 1985
when explaining why he had included Tullock in his list of the one
hundred great economists since John Maynard Keynes. The second is
the short statement published in American Economic Review in
September 1998, recognising Tullock as a Distinguished Fellow of
the American Economic Association.
This unique collection of largely unpublished papers brings
together the founding fathers of law and economics to provide their
own views on the origins and intellectual history of the field. Law
and economics emerged as a separate field of scholarship during the
early 1960s, fueled by two seminal papers, one by Ronald Coase and
one by Guido Calabresi. The ideas generated by scholars researching
in the field have deeply influenced the major disciplines of
economics and the law. These 16 essays (including three by Nobel
Laureates in Economic Sciences) provide an impressive blend of
differing experiences and varying perspectives, reflecting on the
intellectual foundations of the field, its early struggles for
recognition, and its remarkable advance during the last four
decades of the twentieth century, and into the twenty-first. The
essays clearly outline, and contribute new insights into, all of
the central issues of this still vibrant research programme. A
unifying theme of the book is the central importance attached by
each scholar to scientific analysis, rather than to any particular
ideology or dogma. This book provides an absorbing intellectual
history of law and economics, and will be a fascinating read for
academics and researchers with an interest in law and economics,
the history of economic thought, public choice and public policy.
Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the
field of political economics. This volume provides an entree to the
mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
Volume 8 in "The Selected Works of Gordon Tullock" draws from two
highly acclaimed and path-breaking books by Gordon Tullock, The
Social Dilemma (1974) and Autocracy (1987). In this work, Tullock
explores political market behaviour that is based on conflict
rather than on bargaining and thus behaviour that results in wealth
reduction rather than in gains from trade. "The Social Dilemma: The
Economics of War and Revolution" was written in response to the
tumultuous events of the 1960s and 1970s. Specifically, after the
constitutional crisis caused by the Watergate scandal, Tullock
acknowledged the Hobbesian nature of democracy. He posed that
political figures are locked in wealth-reducing circumstances by
the nature of the political game and inherent problems found in
democracy. In Autocracy, Tullock provides a scientific analysis of
dictatorships, using a rational choice model to analyse the
behaviour of individuals under autocracy. Whereas most scholars
have applied public choice theory only to co-operative, democratic
states, Tullock extends the theory into new territory. In addition,
his insights contribute to the discussion of pressing current
issues, such as the transformation of autocracies into democracies.
Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the
field of political economics. This volume provides an entree to the
mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
This final volume of 'The Selected Works of Gordon Tullock' series,
presents an eclectic mix of essays by Gordon Tullock. The first
three sections highlight his pioneering application of rational
choice theory to fields outside the usual purview of economics,
including criminal behaviour, sociobiology, and behaviour in
non-human societies. The final four sections, all concerned with
more traditional areas of economics, still show Tullock at his
innovative best, challenging conventional thinking in such fields
as public finance and monetary economics.
In this book, Tullock focuses attention on the organisation of
science, raising important questions about scientific inquiry and
specifically about the problems of science as a social system.
Tullock poses such questions as: how do scientists engage in
apparently co-operative contributions in the absence of hierarchic
organisation and why are scientific contributions worthy, for the
most part, of the publics trust? Throughout The Organization of
Inquiry, Tullock answers these questions and many more through a
pioneering exploration of the interrelationship between economics
and the philosophy of science, much of which had defied
then-conventional wisdom. Anyone interested in scientific endeavour
will find the combination of Tullocks powerful logic, his sharp
forensic skills, and his barbed wit elucidating and helpful.
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Bureaucarcy (Hardcover)
Charles K. Rowley
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R626
R577
Discovery Miles 5 770
Save R49 (8%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the
field of political economics. This volume provides an entree to the
mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
Trade policy in the United States since 1930 is rigorously
evaluated in this major new book. Using public choice analysis to
identify and explain protectionist behavior, Charles K. Rowley,
Willem Thorbecke and Richard E. Wagner demonstrate why unilateral
free trade cannot be achieved through the normal political process
and make a strong case for constitutional reform.Trade Protection
in the United States analyzes the history of US trade policy to
explain why interest groups are able to foster protectionist
policies despite the advantages which free trade offers consumers.
The authors also explain why the principles of managed trade - as
epitomized in the institution of the GATT - are inevitably
subverted by protectionism. This important book concludes with a
vigorous justification of unilateral free trade and makes a
convincing case for protecting the freedom to trade through an
amendment to the US constitution. Applying recent developments in
constitutional political economy to a key policy issue, this book
will be welcomed by economists, political scientists and lawyers as
a major statement of the right to trade.
This major reference collection presents in three volumes the key
articles and papers on social choice theory.Volume One centres
attention on key aspects of the debate on Arrow's impossibility
theorem, carefully counter-poising differing viewpoints and
embracing competing methodologies. In a field prone to the
excessive use of mathematics and of arcane high theory, Charles
Rowley skilfully presents a literature which is accessible to
non-mathematicians and yet which offers full coverage of all the
major debates. Volumes two and three extend the coverage of social
choice theory to review the attempts of leading scholars to resolve
the ageless problems of determining social goals and reconciling
apparent inconsistencies among such goals. Professor Rowley
carefully guides the reader through a litany of approaches, both
methodological individualist and social engineering, ends-related
and process-related in nature. Volume two reprints leading
contributions to the utilitarian and contractarian ethics while
volume three completes this exercise with material on the social
justice and contractarian ethics. Professor Rowley's own
introductory essay exposes the social choice research programme to
his own Virginian critique, while integrating a large, diffuse
literature into a unified whole.
'They have built a dam across the rivers of justice and then they
complain of the drought in the field below.' - With these stinging
words W. Clarke Durrant III, then Chairman of the Legal Services
Corporation, admonished the American Bar Association in 1987 for
its use of monopoly prices to exclude less affluent Americans from
access to civil justice.The Right to Justice reviews the history of
legal services in the US from its origins in the 1890s to the
multi-million dollar Federal program of the late 20th century. But
this is no ordinary text. Charles Rowley skilfully shows how
government transfers tend to be dissipated in competitive
rent-seeking by special interest groups, that much of what is left
tends to be subverted to the agendas of the more powerful groups
and that the residuals tend to be inefficiently managed by a poorly
monitored and ideologically motivated supply bureaucracy. The
upshot is that customer preferences play little or no role in the
allocation of resources within the legal services budget. In a
veritable tour de force, Charles Rowley places the US Federal legal
services program on the scholarly rack of public choice - which
analyses individual behaviour in terms of universal self-seeking
motivations in a political market. He offers a convincing unique
explanation of the forces that have subverted a well meaning
attempt to assist poor Americans into a co ordinated attack on the
central institutions of the family, capitalism and of Madisonian
Republicanism which together constitute the essence of the American
dream.
Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the
field of political economics. This volume provides an entree to the
mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
This major book brings together four essays which rigorously defend
classical liberal philosophy and present a convincing justification
of the minimal state.In Before Resorting to Politics, the first
essay, Anthony de Jasay rejects political solutions, seeks to
de-politicise society and provides an original analysis of liberty,
coercion, the role of chance and deserts in the distribution of
resources. This is followed by Norman Barry's Classical Liberalism
in the Age of Post-Communism, a succinct but comprehensive
reconstruction of classical liberal theory explaining its
implications for law, constitutionalism and public policy. Adam
Smith into the Twenty-First Century by Edwin West shows how Smith's
liberalism - less ambivalent than that of J.S. Mill and his
followers - continues to thrive and is enjoying a revival in the
1990s. In the final essay, Economic Policy in a Liberal Democracy,
Richard E. Wagner offers an approach to welfare economics and
economic policy appropriate for a classically liberal society. The
essays are co-ordinated by an introduction in which Charles K.
Rowley explains why some notable classical liberal scholars have
abandoned classical liberalism and presents a vigorous
philosophical justification for the minimal state. Including essays
by some of the most eminent scholars in the field, The Political
Economy of the Minimal State makes an important and distinguished
contribution to one of the most contentious issues in twentieth
century political economy.
Gordon Tullock is among a small group of living legends in the
field of political economics. This volume provides an entree to the
mind of an original thinker. Professor Rowley provides deliberately
sparse contextual introduction to each volume, opting to allow the
very able and eloquent Tullock to speak for himself.
Examines the fundamental principles of our legal system from a
public choice perspective and compares its efficiency and accuracy
with other systems. It presents in full two controversial works by
Gordon Tullock, 'The Logic of the Law' and 'The Case against the
Common Law', as well as chapters from his 'Trials on Trial' and
other innovative articles. Highly critical of the US common law
system, Tullock argues for various reforms, even for its
replacement with a civil code system.
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