Affiliation:
1. Universidade Nova de Lisboa
2. Bocconi University
Abstract
Abstract
This article moves from the premise that a bilateral relationship between law and economics requires the contribution of
the theory of legal argumentation. The article shows that, to be legally relevant, economic consequences have to be incorporated into
interpretive arguments. In this regard, the jurisprudential preface strategy proposed by Craswell goes in the right direction, but begs the
question of why the legally relevant consequences have to be assessed in terms of total welfare maximization instead of, in the EU context
at least, consumer welfare maximization. After having identified five points of divergence between total and consumer welfare approaches,
the article draws from legal inferentialism to propose an analytical tool – the explanatory scorekeeping model – for assessing the
explanatory power of these two approaches. The model is then applied to the reasoning in United Brands Company v.
Commission.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Communication
Reference69 articles.
1. Normative Systems
2. What Is Corporate Law?
3. Consumer Sovereignty: A Unified Theory of Antitrust and Consumer Protection Law;Averitt;Antitrust Law Journal,1997
Cited by
3 articles.
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