Law and economic performance in the Roman world
著者
書誌事項
Law and economic performance in the Roman world
(Impact of empire, v. 44)
Brill, c2022
- : hardback
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注記
Includes indexes
収録内容
- Introduction : legal systems and economic development / Koenraad Verboven and Paul Erdkamp
- Private property rights and public claims on land in the Roman Empire / Dennis Kehoe
- Hadrian, middlemen, and the exploitation of imperial domains / Alberto Dalla Rosa
- Adapting imperial economic choices to regional contexts : new evidence from the Sermo Procuratorum and the Lex Hadriana / Hernan Gonzáles Bordaz
- The effectiveness of the early Roman law of obligations for bankers / Philip Kay
- Tax farming as a financial enterprise in the late Roman Republic and the question of the Partes / Boudewijn Sirks
- Goods, law and trade : material evidence for lease and hire contracts (locatio conductio) and a grain sample recorded in CIL 4.9591 / Emilia Mataix Ferrándiz
- Creating and linking socio-economic and legal frames : Cicero's pro quinctio / Sven Günther
- The pretium in numerata pecunia controversy and the Jewish debate over the acquisition of movables / Merav Haklai
- Reliance in the face of death : considerations on Roman economy and fideicommissa / Ulrike Babusiaux
- Roman citizens in the legal economy of a Greek polis : the case of private donations to public bodies / Lina Girdvainyte
- Banking, credit and loans in the novels of the Emperor Justinian / Peter Sarris
- Roman Law, commercial law and Levin Goldschmidt's legacy / Stefania Gialdroni
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book offers critical analyses of the dynamic relation between legal regulations, institutions and economic performance in the Roman world. It studies how law and legal thought affected economic development, and vice versa. Inspired by New Institutional Economics scholars the past decades used ancient law to explain economic growth. There was, however, no natural selection process directing legal changes towards macro-economic efficiency. Ancient rulers and jurists modified institutions to serve or safeguard particular interests-political, social, or economic. Nevertheless both economic performance and legal scholarship peaked at unprecedented levels. These were momentous historical developments. How were they related?
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