Zywicki, T. J.
VIAF ID: 103004889 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/103004889
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Zywicki, T. J.
Selected Titles
Selected Co-authors
- Staten, Michael E. (1)
- Sanders, Anthony B. (1)
- Elliehausen, Gregory (1)
- Durkin, Thomas A. (1)
- Cooper, James C. (1)
Publication Statistics
-
Publication History
1900 | | 2100
Selected Publishers (10)
- School of Law, George Mason U (4)
- pTodd J. Zywicki*/p p* Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law. A.B. 1988, Dartmouth; M. A. (Economics) 1990, Clemson; J.D. 1993, University of Virginia./p (3)
- Springer Science + Business Media (1)
- pToddJ. Zywicki*/p p* Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law; Research Fellow, James Buchanan Center for the Study of Political Economy. The author would like to thank David Hyman and participants at the Northwestern Law Review Symposium for which this paper was prepared for comments and the Law & Economics Center at George Mason University School of Law for financial support for this project. I would also like to thank the IRB directors at several institutions for having the time and patience to speak with me to explain their IRB processes./p (1)
- pTodd J. Zywicki*/p p* Visiting Professor, Boston College Law School; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law; Senior Research Fellow, James Buchanan Center Program on Markets and Institutions. The author testified on the Presidential Transition Act before the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Government Management, Information, and Technology of the Committee on Government Reform on December 4, 2000. The author would like to thank Alex Azar and Michael Abramowicz for their comments on this article, Michael Klarman and Kimberly M. Zywicki for insightful conversations related to the article, the Law & Economics Center at George Mason University School of Law for financial support, and the state of Florida for generating many interesting legal issues during the 2000 election. I would also like to thank the staff of the George Mason Law Library, especially Meghan McGee and Iva Futrell, for their assistance in locating many of the obscure historical sources referred to in this article, and Kai Yu, Boston College Law School Class of 2003, for excellent research assistance./p (1)
- pTODD J. ZYWICKI*/p p* Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law; Research Fellow, James Buchanan Center for the Study of Political Economy, Program on Politics, Philosophy, and Economics. © 2006, Todd J. Zywicki. I would like to thank Bill Bratton, Robert Rasmussen, and Craig Young for their comments on an earlier draft of this Essay. I would also like to thank the Law and Economics Center of George Mason University School of Law for generous research support for writing this Essay./p (1)
- pTodd J. Zywicki*/p p* Director, Office of Policy Planning, Federal Trade Commission; Professor of Law (On Leave), George Mason University School of Law; Senior Research Fellow, James Buchanan Center for Political Economy, Program on Markets and Institutions. I would like to thank Michael Abramowicz, David Bernstein, Lisa Bernstein, Alfred Brophy, Mark Grady, John Hasnas, Bruce Kobayashi, Daniel Klerman, Eric McDaniel, Caleb Nelson, Lars Noah, Bill Page, George Priest, Paul Rubin, Maxwell Stearns, and Edward Stringham for helpful comments on a previous version of this Article. I would like to especially thank Daniel Coquilette for a valuable conversation regarding English legal history, and Randy Barnett, Leonard Liggio, and Tom Palmer for inspiring some of the arguments developed here. I would also like to thank participants at the 2001 Meeting of the American Law and Economics Association, the New York University Austrian Economics Colloquium, the Kaplan Workshop Series of the George Mason Department of Economics, the Dartmouth College Legal Studies Colloquium, University of Florida Law School Faculty Workshop, and George Mason University School of Law Levy Fellows Workshop for suggestions. The original impetus for this Article arose from a Liberty Fund Colloquium on Liberty and Polycentric Law, organized by Bruce Benson in spring 2000 in Tallahassee, Florida, and I would like to thank the participants at that program for stimulating the writing of this Article. Parts of this Article were written while I was a Visiting Professor at Boston College School of Law and I would like to thank the faculty and students there for their support and interest. I would like to thank Jennifer Borzi for her research assistance and Meghan McGee Fatouros for her cheerful and prompt library support. Finally, I would like to thank the Law & Economics Center at George Mason University School of Law for financial support for this project. The views expressed in this Article are entirely my own and do not necessarily represent the position of the Federal Trade Commission or any of its individual members, Commissioners, or staff./p (1)
- pTodd J. Zywick*/p pProfessor of Law, George Mason University School of Law; Senior Research Fellow, James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy, Program in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. J.D., University of Virginia; M.A., Economics, Clemson University; A.B., Dartmouth College. I would like to thank the Law and Economics Center at George Mason University School of Law for financial support for this Article. I would also like to thank Enrico Colombatto and the International Centre for Economic Research in Turin, Italy, where I was a Fellow during the drafting of part of this Article. I would like to thank Bill Bratton, James Bowers, Marjorie Girth, David Hyman, Richard Hynes, Iliana Ilieva, Bruce Johnsen, Edith Jones, Kenneth Klee, Tom Krattenmaker, Jim Lacko, David Newhouse, Jan Pappalardo, Joe Pomykala, George Shepherd, David Skeel, Dan Tarullo, Bill Vukowich, Jack Williams, and Kim Zywicki for comments on this Article. Previous versions of this Article were presented at the Society for the Evolutionary Analysis of Law annual conference, the Canadian Law and Economics Association, and workshops at Boston College Law School, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, University of Colorado School of Law, Emory University School of Law, George Mason University School of Law Levy Fellows Workshop, Georgetown University Law Center, George Washington University School of Law, University of Georgia School of Law, Notre Dame University School of Law, University of Virginia School of Law, and the FTC Bureau of Economics Workshop./p (1)
- pJudge Edith H. Jones* Todd J. Zywicki*/p p* Judge Edith H. Jones has sat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit since 1985 and served as a member of the National Bankruptcy Review Commission from 1995 to 1997./p p** Todd J. Zywicki is an Assistant Professor of Law at George Mason University School of Law. He received his J.D. from the University of Virginia in 1993 and a Masters of Economics from Clemson University in 1990. The authors would like to thank Dagobert Brito, Marcus Cole, Peter Hartley, Scott Norberg, Jeanne Wendel, Jack Williams, and Kimberly M. Zywicki for comments on an earlier draft of this article. They would especially like to thank Professors Marianne Culhane and Michaela White of Creighton University School of Law for their patient and helpful responses to inquiries about their study. Professor Zywicki would also like to thank the Law and Economics Center at George Mason University School of Law for financial support for this project./p (1)
- pAsheesh Agarwal is assistant director of the Office of Policy Planning at the Federal Trade Commission./p pJerry Ellig is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University./p pTodd Zywicki is a professor of law at the George Mason University School of Law and currently a visiting professor of law at the Georgetown University Law Center./p pThe views expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not represent the views of the Federal Trade Commission or any individual commissioner./p (1)
About
Personal Information
External Links
Record Views
History of VIAF ID:103004889 (12)
Record ID | Action | Time |
---|---|---|
WKP|Todd_Zywicki | delete | 2015-04-14T18:56:54+00:00 |
NTA|321460391 | delete | 2017-05-30T15:58:05.067685+00:00 |
NUKAT|n 2015093303 | delete | 2017-05-30T15:58:05.078077+00:00 |
NLI|004117552 | delete | 2020-04-12T15:00:57.693087+00:00 |
SUDOC|18263969X | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.273717+00:00 |
CAOONL|ncf11912174 | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.276641+00:00 |
J9U|987007446430105171 | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.279397+00:00 |
ISNI|0000000073193238 | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.282222+00:00 |
WKP|Q7812730 | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.284929+00:00 |
NII|DA1709134X | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.287645+00:00 |
LC|no2009177300 | delete | 2021-01-31T07:05:07.290397+00:00 |
ISNI|0000000351618575 | add | 2021-01-31T07:13:47.460594+00:00 |