Comparative Law and Economics: Borrowing and Resistance

Ugo Mattei, Hastings College of the Law; Univ. of Turin, Italy
Alberto Monti, University of Milano School of Law and ICER - International Centre for Economic Research

A GJ Frontiers article.

Abstract

Comparative law and economics is a rather new discipline located at the frontiers of contemporary legal research. This innovative scholarly paradigm - combining the analytical tools of adjoining and complementary social sciences in order to develop a critical approach to legal rules and institutions - conveys a distinctive European perspective on the theory and practice of law and economics. In the age of globalisation, the diffuse and substantial lack of comparative understanding within the legal community brings about a serious challenge to the epistemological validity of the traditional economic analysis of law. Comparative law and economics treats the legal and institutional backgrounds as dynamic variables and attempts to build models which reflect the ever changing layered complexity of the real world of the law, broadening the horizon of the underlying legal discourse and conferring a higher degree of realism to the theoretical analysis. The false opposition between a global dimension, which is the domain of the market and of efficient institutions, and a local dimension, as the location of solidarity and politics, requires a genuine cosmopolitan legal culture to be exposed and challenged. In other words, what is currently required is a global jurist capable to handle analogies and differences, to locate them at the proper level of the institutional scenario, to register the different sensitivities and stakes that are at play in the centre and in the periphery; a global jurist capable, in one sentence, to deconstruct the objectivity of market globalisation worldwide.

Originally published in Global Jurist Frontiers.

Recommended Citation

Mattei, Ugo and Monti, Alberto (2001) "Comparative Law and Economics: Borrowing and Resistance," Global Jurist Frontiers: Vol. 1 : Iss. 2, Article 5.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/gj/frontiers/vol1/iss2/art5

 
 
 
 

ISSN: 1934-2640 ©1999-2008 The Berkeley Electronic Press™ All rights reserved.

To submit, subscribe, recommend this journal to your library, or sign up for email alerts, please visit: http://www.bepress.com/gj