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The Law & Economics Emphasis provides undergraduates with tools of economic analysis that allow them to explain why particular legal rules exist, to predict the effects of particular legal rules, and to analyze whether particular legal rules should exist. In addition, the emphasis provides students with the economic tools and institutional knowledge to examine various aspects of the legal system, torts, contracts, property rights, the economics of litigation, antitrust law, and regulation.
3+3 Accelerated Law @ Ole Miss
Students completing the B.A. or B.S. degrees in the College of Liberal Arts (including Economics) are eligible for a new 3+3 Accelerated Law program with the UM School of Law. Students would receive their undergraduate and JD degrees in six instead of seven years.
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Encyclopedia of Law & Economics (great resource)
Foundations of Economic Analysis of Law (Ebook, creating an account is free and easy)
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“Ronald Coase (1910-2013) was one of the most influential economists of the 20th century. His influence is due largely to two publications, the only two cited in the announcement of his Nobel Prize: “The Nature of the Firm” (1937) and “The Problem of Social Cost” (1960). These two articles are among the most-cited works in economics. The ideas Coase developed in these two works led to entirely new fields of inquiry in economics, law, management, and political science, and in conjunction with his article on using markets to allocate radio spectrum (Coase 1959), spawned new market design theory and practice that helped to transform our society and enable innovation and digitization.”
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“A weekly newsletter by Brian Albrecht and Josh Hendrickson. We are both professors of economics with a passion for we call “price theory,” a particular approach to economics that used to be taught at places like UCLA and Chicago. This newsletter is our attempt to work through and clarify points in price theory.”
The famous blog.
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