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The Federalist remains the best single account of how American
democracy is supposed to work. That said, it remains incomplete.
While generations of scholars from Alexis de Tocqueville to Anthony
Downs have worked hard to fill these gaps, America's
constantly-changing society and political institutions continue to
encounter new puzzles and challenges. We Hold These Truths provides
a comprehensive survey of recent scholarship about the Framers'
vision, stressing how long-established political patterns can
abruptly change as voters become more polarized, and even lead to
feedbacks that amplify public anger still further. Developing a
theory of American democracy for the age of the internet, Trump,
and polarization, this study mixes modern social science with a
detailed knowledge of history, asking where the Framers' scheme has
gone wrong – and what can be done to fix it.
This book presents eleven classic papers by the late Professor
Suzanne Scotchmer with introductions by leading economists and
legal scholars. This book introduces Scotchmer's life and work;
analyses her pioneering contributions to the economics of patents
and innovation incentives, with a special focus on the modern
theory of cumulative innovation; and describes her pioneering work
on law and economics, evolutionary game theory, and general
equilibrium/club theory. This book also provides a self-contained
introduction to students who want to learn more about the various
fields that Professor Scotchmer worked in, with a particular focus
on patent incentives and cumulative innovation.
Commercial and academic communities use private rules to regulate
everything from labor conditions to biological weapons. This
self-governance is vital in the twenty-first century, where private
science and technology networks cross so many borders that
traditional regulation and treaty solutions are often impractical.
Self-Governance in Science analyzes the history of private
regulation, identifies the specific market factors that make
private standards stable and enforceable, explains what governments
can do to encourage responsible self-regulation, and asks when
private power might be legitimate. Unlike previous books which
stress sociology or political science perspectives, Maurer
emphasizes the economic roots of private power to deliver a
coherent and comprehensive account of recent scholarship.
Individual chapters present a detailed history of past
self-government initiatives, describe the economics and politics of
private power, and extract detailed lessons for law, legitimacy
theory, and public policy.
Commercial and academic communities use private rules to regulate
everything from labor conditions to biological weapons. This
self-governance is vital in the twenty-first century, where private
science and technology networks cross so many borders that
traditional regulation and treaty solutions are often impractical.
Self-Governance in Science analyzes the history of private
regulation, identifies the specific market factors that make
private standards stable and enforceable, explains what governments
can do to encourage responsible self-regulation, and asks when
private power might be legitimate. Unlike previous books which
stress sociology or political science perspectives, Maurer
emphasizes the economic roots of private power to deliver a
coherent and comprehensive account of recent scholarship.
Individual chapters present a detailed history of past
self-government initiatives, describe the economics and politics of
private power, and extract detailed lessons for law, legitimacy
theory, and public policy.
This book presents eleven classic papers by the late Professor
Suzanne Scotchmer with introductions by leading economists and
legal scholars. This book introduces Scotchmer's life and work;
analyses her pioneering contributions to the economics of patents
and innovation incentives, with a special focus on the modern
theory of cumulative innovation; and describes her pioneering work
on law and economics, evolutionary game theory, and general
equilibrium/club theory. This book also provides a self-contained
introduction to students who want to learn more about the various
fields that Professor Scotchmer worked in, with a particular focus
on patent incentives and cumulative innovation.
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