1st Edition

Modern Understandings of Liberty and Property Liberty, Property, and the Law

Edited By Richard A. Epstein Copyright 2000

    First Published in 2000. The materials in this collection are drawn from many disciplines, including economics, law, philosophy and political science. Yet they are all directed to a topic that is worthy of examination from multiple perspectives: Liberty, Property and the Law. Stated in this general form, this topic is broad as law itself. The relationship of liberty and property to the law surfaces whenever and wherever people interact with each other under the command and control of the sovereign. This is Volume II of five and concerns the extent to which the state should enforce or override private contracts made by individuals to dispose of their labor or capital. These issues did not disappear by the onset of the twentieth century, where Volume II picks up. Generally speaking, however, the tools of analysis shifted as the advances in economic theory helped to flesh out the justifications offered for individual liberty and private property on the one hand, and their social control on the other. Although the nature of the discourse changed to some degree, the division of opinion on the proper role of liberty and property remained as sharply contested as it was in earlier times.

    Series Introduction, Volume Introduction, Coercion and Distribution in a Supposedly Non-Coercive State, The Use of Knowledge in Society, The Intellectual History of Laissez Faire, The Relation between Economic Freedom and Political Freedom, from Capitalism and Freedom, The Problem of Social Cost, Toward a Theory of Property Rights, Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Inalienability: One View of the Cathedral, Distributive Justice, The Marxist Conception of Violence, The Disintegration of Property, Self-Ownership, World Ownership, and Equality: Part II, Approximate Optimality of Aboriginal Property Rights, Acknowledgments

    Biography

    Richard A. Epstein University of Chicago Law School