Canadian Law and Economics Association Conference 2002
Faculty of Law University of Toronto
September 27-28, 2002

CLEA Sessions: Sept. 27-28, 2002
(Commencing at 12:45 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 27th, 2002)

  1. INSTITUTIONAL LAW & ECONOMICS
  2. CORPORATE LAW (1)
  3. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, INNOVATION
  4. DISTRIBUTION
  5. COMPETITION
  6. BEHAVIOURAL, DEVELOPMENT AND LABOUR LAW AND ECONOMICS
  7. GOVERNMENT POLICY TOWARD INNOVATION
  8. CONTRACTS AND CORPORATE LAW
  9. COMPETITION LAW
  10. COMPARATIVE INSOLVENCY LAW
  11. INTERNATIONAL LAW AND TRADE
  12. CORPORATE LAW (2)
  13. CRIMINAL LAW AND LIABILITY
  14. PREDATION
  15. CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES IN LAW AND ECONOMICS
  16. REGULATION AND DEREGULATION
  17. LOTTERIES
  18. SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY AND FAMILY LAW
  19. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
  20. CORPORATE LAW (3)

The Eleventh Annual John M. Olin Public Lecture in Law and Economics

At the Bennett Lecture Hall, 78 Queen’s Park (University of Toronto Law Library)
Friday, September 27, 2002 ***4:15 p.m. – 5:45 p.m.
***All Are WELCOME

Professor Saul Levmore“Property’s Uneasy Future (and Past)”

by

Professor Saul Levmore
University of Chicago Law School

Read the complete text here (Word format)

 


Saul Levmore became the Dean of the University of Chicago Law School in July 2001, having joined that faculty in 1998. He had previously been the Brokaw Professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, and a visiting professor at Yale, Harvard, Chicago, Michigan, and Northwestern. Professor Levmore has taught, torts, corporations, non-profit organizations, comparative law, public choice, corporate tax, commercial law, insurance, and contracts. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  Away from law, he has been an advisor on development strategies and is the author of a book on games and puzzles. Some of Professor Levmore's most recent publications include:  "Ruling Majorities and Reasoning Pluralities" 3 Theoretical Inquiries in Law  (2002); "Puzzling Stock Options and Compensation Norms," 149 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1901 (2001); "Conjunction and Aggregation," 99 Michigan Law Review 723 (2001); "Voting  with Intensity," 53 Stanford Law Review 111 (2000).