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Gordon Tullock and the Virginia School of Law and Economics
Authors:Francesco Parisi  Barbara Luppi  Alice Guerra
Institution:1.University of Minnesota Law School,Minneapolis,USA;2.Department of Economics,University of Bologna,Bologna,Italy;3.Department of Economics,University of Modena and Reggio Emilia,Modena,Italy;4.Department of Business and Politics,Copenhagen Business School,Frederiksberg,Denmark
Abstract:In 1999 Gordon Tullock became Professor at the George Mason University Law School. Tullock’s arrival at George Mason brought the economics department and the law school close together. The work that resulted during those years consolidated the methodological foundations for a different way of thinking about the economic analysis of law—the “functional” approach to law and economics. The functional law and economics approach espoused by the Virginia School was not attacking any of the results of the Chicago School or the Yale School, but rather proposing a methodological shift. This paper presents some of the results developed by this school and illustrates Tullock’s controversial positions on trials and on the common law system, through anecdotes, Tullock’s own work and related scholarly contributions.
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