
Legal Systems Very Different from Ours – David Friedman’s forthcoming book
14 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, David Friedman, law and economics Tags: comparative economic analysis, comparative law, David Friedman, law and economics, Legal systems very different to ours
The central idea of David Friedman’s forthcoming book on legal systems of different societies is they face similar problems and solve them, or fail to, in an interesting variety of ways.
Looking at a range of such societies and trying to make sense of their legal systems provides a window into both problems and solutions, useful for the general project of understanding law—in particular but not exclusively from an economic point of view—and for the narrower project of improving it.
Unlike the usual course in comparative law, he did not look at systems close to ours such as modern Civil Law or Japanese law. Instead, Friedman examined systems from the distant past (Athens, Imperial China), from radically different societies (saga period Iceland, Sharia), or contemporary systems independent of government law (gypsy law, Amish).
System Chapters
Icelandic Law
18th c. English Criminal Law
Gypsy Law
Chinese Law
Athenian Law: The Work of a Mad Economist
Jewish Law
Islamic Law [Recently Updated]
Plains Indian Law
Puzzles of Irish Law
Amish Law
Somali Law [Recently Updated]
Commanche, Kiowa and Cheyenne: The Plains Indians
Thread Chapters
Enforcement Mechanisms: Civil, Criminal, And Lots More
The Incentive to Enforce: What and How Much
Embedded and Polylegal Systems
God as Legislator
Making Law
Guarding the Guardians
His Class web page is based on Student Papers from the SCU Seminar
David Friedman on Director’s law and and poverty and inequality under capitalism
13 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, David Friedman, Marxist economics Tags: David Friedman, Director's Law, poverty versus inequality, That Great Enrichment

HT: Cafe Hayek
Milton Friedman Describes Hong Kong as an Example of the Free Market System
12 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, comparative institutional analysis, development economics, growth disasters, Milton Friedman Tags: Hong Kong, Milton Friedman, The Great Enrichment
Deirdre McCloskey on the axiom of goodwill in public policy making in left-wing circles
06 Oct 2014 Leave a comment

Arthur Pigou on comparative institutional analysis
04 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis Tags: Arthur Pigou, government failure, market failure, public choice
Comparative institutional analysis, market failure, government








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