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August 30, 2008
Lipshaw on Objectivity and Subjectivity in Contract Law
Our compatriot Legal Profession blogger Jeffrey Lipshaw (Suffolk University Law School) has a new piece in the Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence titled Objectivity and Subjectivity in Contract Law: A Copernican Response to Professor Shiffrin. It is available on SSRN; here's the abstract:
This is a response to Seana Shiffrin's recent and important contribution to the continuing debate whether there is a universal moral or economic truth at the heart of contract law. Her most significant advance toward a general theory of promise and contract is not, however, her analysis of the divergence of morality and contract, but instead her identification of the critical moment at which the interposition of the public in a private matter occurs or is contemplated. This essay carries that theme forward, suggesting that a universal justification for contract law is not possible because the law, by its very nature, objectifies (publicly or with that implicit threat) what was heretofore a private relationship.
Give it a read!
[Meredith R. Miller]
August 30, 2008 in Recent Scholarship | Permalink
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