Synopses & Reviews
Supreme Court Economic Review is an interdisciplinary journal that provides a forum for scholarship in law and economics, public choice, and constitutional political economy. Its approach is broad-ranging and the contributions it brings together apply explicit or implicit economic reasoning to the analysis of legal issues before the court, with special attention to Supreme Court decisions, judicial process, and institutional design.
About the Author
Ilya Somin is assistant professorat George Mason University.
Todd J. Zywicki is the Foundation Professor of Law in the School of Law and a senior scholar of the Mercatus Center, both at George Mason University.
Table of Contents
Supreme Court Economic Review, Volume 18
Table of Contents
SEARLE CENTER PUBLIC NUISANCE ROUNDTABLE
Expansion of Liability under Public Nuisance
Henry N. Butler and Todd J. Zywicki
The Mismatch Between Public Nuisance Laws and Global Warming
David A. Dana
The Economics of Public Nuisance Laws and the New Enforcement Actions
Keith N. Hylton
Private Contingent Fee Lawyers and Public Power: Constitutional and Political Implications
Martin H. Redish
Market Share Liability in Personal Injury and
Public Nuisance Litigation: An Economic Analysis
George L. Priest
The Effects of Litigation Financing Rules on Settlement Rates
Laura Inglis and Kevin McCabe
The Supreme Court and the Sophisticated Use of DIGs
Michael E. Solimine and Rafael Gely
Determinants of Citations of Supreme Court Opinions (And the Remarkable Infl uence of Justice Scalia)
Frank B. Cross
The Role of Competition in the Market for Adjudication
Isaac DiIanni
On A Passé Defense: Unjust Enrichment and the Recovery of Overpaid Taxes
Jacob Nussim
Punitive Damages by Numbers: Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker
Joni Hersch and W. Kip Viscusi