Why private governance?
1. Introduction
2. Beyond the deus ex machina theory of law
3. Rules from voluntary associations as an alternative to coercive
ones: Governance as a club good
Privately governed markets in history and modern times
4. Markets without enforcement: Reciprocity and reputation
mechanisms in the world's first stock market
5. The evolution of rules in exclusive clubs: From coffeehouses to
the London Stock Exchange
6. Markets creating transparency: Competing listing and disclosure
requirements from the Big Board in New York to the Alternative
Investment Market in London
7. How technologically advanced markets can work even when fraud is
"legal": Ex ante risk management by PayPal and other
intermediaries
8. Bundling governance with bricks and mortar: Private policing in
colleges, in California, North Carolina, and beyond
9. The most personal form of private governance: Individual
self-governance
10. When third party review is "necessary": Adjudication by
contract
11. Does private governance work in the most complex markets?
Successful risk management on Wall Street even in the wake of the
2008 economic downturn
Lessons of private governance
12. The relationship between public and private governance: Does
the state help or crowd out good governance?
13. Applying Hayek's insights about discovery and spontaneous order
to governance
14. The unseen beauty that underpins markets
Edward Peter Stringham is the Davis Professor of Economic
Organizations and Innovation at Trinity College, Hartford,
Connecticut. Stringham is president of the Society for the
Development of Austrian Economics, former president of the
Association of Private Enterprise Education, editor of the Journal
of Private Enterprise, editor of two books, and author of more than
sixty journal articles, book chapters, and policy studies. His work
has been
discussed on more than 100 broadcast stations, including CBS, CNBC,
CNN, Fox, Headline News, NPR, and MTV.
"Stringham's thesis is thought provoking. He argues it well and
provides a number of case studies that illustrate clearly how
private governance succeeded when most people would expect it to
fail."
Ethics and Culture Blog
"Stringham is to be commended for his bold and wonderfully-argued
thesis, and for the research that he has done in supporting his
claims. This book is a delight to read, is packed with accessible
and fascinating information, is confident enough to tweak the noses
of the Left and is a recommended - required - read for anyone
interested in the beauty of spontaneous order, far removed from the
shadow of the state."
The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
"Private Governance is a masterpiece of economic, philosophical,
and legal reasoning that will shake progressive ideology to its
foundations, and, if read by enough young people, dispatch it to a
waiting grave."
Andrew Napolitano, Fox News
"Stringham dispels state-worshipping fiction with historical fact
to show how good governance has preceded Leviathan, ignores it when
necessary, and can surpass it when it fails."
Peter Thiel, Entrepreneur
"If you read this book you will have to readjust what you think is
possible. A masterful account that mixes history, theory, and a
deep understanding of what contracts really mean."
Michael Munger, Duke University
"The dominant view in economic and political theory is that markets
can only exist in the 'shadow of the state.' This superb volume
challenges this contention head on."
Mark Pennington, King's College London
"Explains how private governance can work in theory and carefully
details a series of real-world case studies to illustrate how it
actually works. Stringham writes so well that this book should be
appreciated and enjoyed by academics and non-academics alike."
Bruce Benson, Florida State University
"The theory and practice of private provision of protection,
security, and adjudication has a long and distinguished history.
Private Governance is an extremely important contribution to
understanding this issue."
Leonard Liggio, Institute for Humane Studies
"Adam Smith brought us the 'invisible hand.' Now, Stringham brings
us 'private governance.' Am I going too far in comparing Stringham
to Smith? Maybe so, but it is because Smith does not deserve to be
mentioned in the same sentence as Stringham. Read this book (that's
an order!)."
Walter Block, Loyola University-New Orleans
"Brimming with surprises and intellectual curiosity. Stringham
turns the conventional wisdom on its head, in delightful and
convincing fashion."
Tom Woods, Historian
"Masterfully weaves economic analysis with little-known history and
elegant storytelling to demonstrate the power of individuals to
create order without law or government. Essential reading for
policy-makers, academics, and anyone else with questions about the
power of freedom."
Marcus Cole, Stanford University
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