The Exchange Order - Richard Adelstein

The Exchange Order

Property and Liability as an Economic System
Buch | Hardcover
288 Seiten
2017
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-069427-2 (ISBN)
109,95 inkl. MwSt
The Exchange Order illuminates a comprehensive social system that comprises explicit markets, tort liability and criminal liability, and describes each of these three institutions as serving the same function in different social and physical circumstances.
There are three basic institutional systems for governing the exchange of property. One is consensual: the exchange of property rights in ordinary markets. The other two, however, are nonconsensual: the involuntary exchange of entitlements in either civil or criminal liability cases.

In The Exchange Order, Richard Adelstein argues that while markets, torts, and criminal justice are ostensibly different constellations of institutions, organizations and individuals, they are remarkably alike. Each governs a particular kind of exchange through a distinctive set of institutions, rules and procedures. They have all evolved over many centuries from the same root, a deep-seated human propensity to communicate with others through trade, to exchange goods for goods and costs for costs as a means of reconciling opposing interests and increasing personal welfare. They perform the same social function, facilitating individually efficient exchanges of rights and compensatory prices, in very different exchange environments that demand very different institutional responses to the problem all three are in place to solve: identifying efficient transfers and seeing that they are completed.

The Exchange Order provides a sweeping historical, comparative, and philosophical analysis of how rights and objects, goods and harms, are exchanged in these apparently very different realms. What unites them is a core norm: take only what you can pay for, and pay for everything you take. In markets free exchange is governed by prices and the willingness to sell or buy. Tort and criminal law apply when consensual exchange is violated. The violation is the non-consensual seizure of entitlements and the payment is a liability price on the taker that compensates the victim for the costs imposed by the taking. Tit for tat, an eye for an eye, is the principle of exchange that unites markets, tort and crime.

Richard Adelstein is a graduate of MIT, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, a member of the Connecticut Bar, and has taught at Wesleyan University since 1975. His scholarly interests lie at the intersection of economics, law, history and philosophy, and his work has appeared in scholarly journals in several disciplines. He is the author of The Rise of Planning in Industrial America, 1865-1914 (2012).

Introduction: Governing Exchange

Part I: Property
Chapter 1: Property and Exchange
Chapter 2: Exchange and Efficiency
Chapter 3: Property and Utility
Chapter 4: Property and Technology

Part II: Liability
Chapter 5: Externality
Chapter 6: Tort Liability
Chapter 7: To Encourage the Others
Chapter 8: Criminal Liability
Chapter 9: Crime and Punishment
Chapter 10: Trials and Bargains
Afterword: The Exchange Order
Bibliography

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 239 x 160 mm
Gewicht 522 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Sozialwissenschaften
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre
ISBN-10 0-19-069427-0 / 0190694270
ISBN-13 978-0-19-069427-2 / 9780190694272
Zustand Neuware
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