Building Legal Order in Ancient Athens

F. Carugati, Gillian K. Hadfield, Barry R. Weingast
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引用次数: 25

Abstract

How do democratic societies establish and maintain order in ways that are conducive to growth? Contemporary scholarship associates order, democracy, and growth with centralized rule of law institutions. In this article, we test the robustness of modern assumptions by turning to the case of ancient Athens. Democratic Athens was remarkably stable and prosperous, but the ancient city-state never developed extensively centralized rule of law institutions. Drawing on the “what-is-law” account of legal order elaborated by Hadfield and Weingast (2012),we show that Athens’ legal order relied on institutions that achieved common knowledge and incentive compatibility for enforcers in a largely decentralized system of coercion. Our approach provides fresh insights into how robust legal orders may be built in countries where centralized rule of law institutions have failed to take root.
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古雅典的法律秩序建设
民主社会如何以有利于增长的方式建立和维持秩序?当代学术将秩序、民主和增长与集中的法治机构联系在一起。在这篇文章中,我们通过转向古雅典的案例来检验现代假设的稳健性。民主的雅典非常稳定和繁荣,但这个古老的城邦从未发展出广泛的中央集权法治机构。借鉴哈德菲尔德(Hadfield)和魏因加斯特(Weingast, 2012)阐述的“法律是什么”(what-is-law)对法律秩序的解释,我们表明,雅典的法律秩序依赖于在一个很大程度上分散的强制体系中为执法者实现常识和激励相容的制度。我们的方法为如何在集中式法治机构未能扎根的国家建立健全的法律秩序提供了新的见解。
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