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Today, a California resident can incorporate her shipping business
in Delaware, register her ships in Panama, hire her employees from
Hong Kong, place her earnings in an asset-protection trust formed
in the Cayman Islands, and enter into a same-sex marriage in
Massachusetts or Canada--all the while enjoying the California
sunshine and potentially avoiding many facets of the state's laws.
In this book, Erin O'Hara and Larry E. Ribstein explore a new
perspective on law, viewing it as a product for which people and
firms can shop, regardless of geographic borders. The authors
consider the structure and operation of the market this creates,
the economic, legal, and political forces influencing it, and the
arguments for and against a robust market for law. Through
jurisdictional competition, law markets promise to improve our laws
and, by establishing certainty, streamline the operation of the
legal system. But the law market also limits governments' ability
to enforce regulations and protect citizens from harmful
activities. Given this tradeoff, O'Hara and Ribstein argue that
simple contractual choice-of-law rules can help maximize the
benefits of the law market while tempering its social costs. They
extend their insights to a wide variety of legal problems,
including corporate governance, securities, franchise, trust,
property, marriage, living will, surrogacy, and general contract
regulations.
The Law Market is a wide-ranging and novel analysis for all
lawyers, policymakers, legislators, and businesses who need to
understand the changing role of law in an increasingly mobile
world.
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