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The authors relate current arguments to traditional ideas of
republicanism and democracy and compare them with the Revolution,
Civil War, and civil rights and suffrage movements.
"The Supreme Court Economic Review" series applies economic and
legal scholarship to the work of the United States Supreme Court.
Contributions provide economic analyses of events that generate the
Court's cases, its organizational functioning, its rationale, and
the societal impact of these verdicts.
This interdisciplinary review series provides an economic analysis
of the situations and events that generate a case or group of cases
decided by the United States Supreme Court, the implicit or
explicit economic reasoning employed by the Court to reach its
decisions, and the economic consequences of the Court's decisions.
Distribution Restrictions Operate by Creating Dealer Profits:
Explaining the Use of Maximum Resale Price Maintenance in State Oil
v. Khan, Benjamin KleinThe Predictability of Punitive Damages
Awards in Published Opinions, the Impact of BMW v. Gore on Punitive
Damages Awards, and Forecasting Which Punitive Awards Will Be
Reduced, Theodore Eisenberg amp Martin T. WellsShould Justices Ever
Switch Votes?: Miller v. Albright in Social Choice Perspective,
Maxwell L. StearnsAntitrust on Internet Time: Microsoft and the Law
and Economics of Exclusion, John E. Lopatka amp William H.
PagePreserving the American Common Market: State and Local
Governments in the United States Supreme Court, Christopher R.
DrahozalMaking Something Out of Nothing: The Law of Takings and
Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation, Michael A. Heller amp
James E. Krier
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