An important new research program has developed in economics that
extends neoclassical economic theory in order to examine the effects of
institutions on economic behavior. The body of work emerging from this
new line of inquiry includes contributions from the various branches of
economic theory, such as the economics of property rights, the theory of
the firm, cliometrics and law and economics. This book is the first
comprehensive survey of this research program, which the author terms
"neoinstitutional economics." The author proposes a unified approach to
this research, integrating the work of various contributors and
emphasizing the common principles of inquiry that tie the work together.
The theoretical discussion is accomplished by empirical studies dealing
with a whole range of institutions and economic systems.