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The Limits of Freedom of Contract - Michael J. Trebilcock

The Limits of Freedom of Contract

By: Michael J. Trebilcock

Paperback | 25 March 1997 | Edition Number 1

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Our Legal System is committed to the idea that private markets and the law of contracts that supports them are the primary institutions for allocating goods and services in a modern economy. Yet the market paradigm, Michael Trebilcock argues, leaves substantial room for challenge. For example, should people be permitted to buy and sell blood, bodily organs, surrogate babies, pornography, or sexual favors? Is it fair to allow people with limited knowledge about a transaction and its consequences to enter into it without guidance from experts? Finally, do people always know their own preferences, many of which may be socially conditioned? These are only a few of the issues Trebilcock explores in this sweeping analysis of the private ordering model of contract law and the major theoretical camps critiquing it, including the communication and the feminist. He examines the implication that the private ordering paradigm simultaneously promotes autonomy and welfare values, and argues that in many contexts the convergence of these values is much more contestable than its proponents claim. The book treats all the conflicting perspectives with care, acknowledging both their strengths and their weaknesses, and using them to illuminate many specific dilemmas. Trebilcock also pays close attention to how various theories may be translated into practice, revealing that ideas which appear to oppose each other at an abstract level are in fact similar when implemented at the institutional level. In conclusion, Trebilcock argues that we need to be more alert to the possibility of adopting public policies that broaden access to market opportunities for the disadvantaged. Economists, lawyers, politicalscientists, philosophers, and policy analysts will all benefit from reading this brilliant synthesis and reinterpretation of contract law.
Industry Reviews
This illuminating book explores under what conditions legal enforcement of contracts will promote both individual autonomy and social welfare...Trebilcock provides here the most nuanced and sustained analysis of what it means for private agreements to be sufficiently voluntary and informed to further either Paretian or Kaldor-Hicks notions of social welfare...Readers will respect the compassion and care Trebilcock brings to this subject matter...This is law and economics with a human face. -- Ian Ayres Journal of Economic Literature

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