LAW 9282

Constitutional Law and Economics

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Course Description

This course will explore how economic reasoning informs constitutional and public law processes, including bargaining, voting, delegating, and enforcement. We will consider the incentive effects of legal rules and institutional designs and evaluate their implications for public and semi-public goods (like civil rights and international cooperation on climate change) and club and private goods (like welfare benefits and the right to immigrate).


  • Michael Gilbert

     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.58

     Sections

    1

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026