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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Law, Economics and Evolutionary Theory
Editor(s): Zumbansen, Peer; Calliess, Gralf-Peter
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN (hard cover): 9781848448230
Section: Chapter 11
Section Title: Gene-Culture Co-Evolutionary Theory and the Evolution of Legal Behavior and Institutions
Author(s): Laing, Bart Du
Number of pages: 22
Extract:
11. Gene-culture co-evolutionary theory
and the evolution of legal behavior and
institutions
Bart Du Laing*
1. INTRODUCTION
Some of the chapters in this edited volume are likely to have at least two things in
common. First, they aim to contribute to a research project on `legal certainty for glo-
balized exchange processes' and to the latter's attempts to explain the observed trans-
formation `towards the transnationalization of commercial law, which is understood as
a combination of the internationalization and privatization of the responsibility of the
state for the production of the normative good of legal certainty for global commerce'.
Secondly, they aim to fulfill this task by making use of `evolutionary theory' or, as it was
again expressed in the original conference announcement giving rise to earlier drafts of
this chapter, by dealing with `a theoretical perspective that gives some substance to the
meaning of the term "evolution" with regard to law, social organization, and the state'.
Since, as I will try to explain shortly, my own particular take on this it would appear
relatively small set of commonalities involves more specifically the use of contemporary
evolutionary approaches to human behavior, I must admit to having been surprised that
no one else seemed to have much use for these approaches in their respective takes on the
problems that united us in the conference from which this chapter stems. After all, what
better use to make of a theory originating from biology than to elucidate the biological
underpinnings ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2011/247.html