Bijuralism: An Economic ApproachAlbert Breton, M. J. Trebilcock Bijuralism is the coexistence of two or more legal systems or subsystems within a broader legal order. Issues addressed in papers and comments in this volume carry important implications for legal education and for a furthering of our understanding of bijuralism and multijuralism. |
Contents
Bijural Services as Factors of Production | 58 |
The Challenge of Incomplete Law and How Different Legal | 71 |
Commentary C on Pistor and | 109 |
Copyright | |
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administrative allocation Andrei Shleifer Anton Piller Order application arbitration bijural and multijural bijural Canadian lawyers bijural law firms bijural lawyers bijural services bijurally trained lawyers bilingual Canada ceteris paribus changes choice of law civil law systems coevolution common law common law systems Comparative Law competition concept conflict of law context contract contractual security costs countries demand for bijural different legal systems effect elasticity equilibrium evolution example factor of production factors federal functions harmonization human capital important incomplete law increase individuals influence interaction interviewees Journal judicial review language law and civil Law and Economics law enforcement powers law jurisdictions law-making and law legal culture legal lingua franca legal regime legal rules legal traditions legal transplants legislative legislature Lex Mercatoria liability Mattei monojural lawyers particular parties Pistor principles private law Quebec regulators regulatory relevant role services of bijural suggests supply theory transaction security transsystemic transactions