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Establishing a Revolutionary Newspaper: Transplanting Liberalism in a Pre-Modern Society
In: L. Kiousopoulou, M. Tsirli, P. Voyatzis, eds. Human Rights in Times of Illiberal Democracies (Liber Amicorum in Memoriam of Stavros Tsakyrakis). Athens: Nomiki Vivliothiki. pp. 293-317 (2020)
SSRN
A Political History of Modern Greece, 1821–2018
In: In: Marciano, A., Ramello, G.B. (eds) Encyclopedia of Law and Economics. Springer, New York, NY, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7753-2_53
SSRN
Moral Externalities: An Economic Approach to the Legal Enforcement of Morality
In: Law and Economics: Philosophical Issues and Fundamental Questions. Edited by Aristides N. Hatzis & Nicholas Mercuro. London/New York: Routledge, 2015. Pp. 226-244
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Rule of Law, Individual Rights and the Free Market in the Liberal Tradition: The Case of Greece
In: Bridging the Gap: An Arab-European Dialogue on the Basics of Liberalism, Ronald Meinardus, ed. Cairo: Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Liberty, 2014. Pp. 27-43
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Greece as a Precautionary Tale of the Welfare State
In: "After the Welfare State", edited by Tom G. Palmer (Washington, DC: Atlas Economic Research Foundation, 2012), pp. 21-30
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From soft to hard paternalism and back: the regulation of surrogate motherhood in Greece
In: Portuguese economic journal, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 205-220
ISSN: 1617-9838
From soft to hard paternalism and back : the regulation of surrogate motherhood in Greece
This paper is a critical analysis of the regulation of surrogate motherhood in Greece; I will discuss the way that a consensus reached in the legislative committee among liberal and conservative jurists on the matter of compensation of surrogate mothers was undermined by intra-party populism in the Greek parliament which banned it to avoid commodification; inevitably the law fell into disuse leading to a new law which allowed government-defined compensation, not the one agreed by the parties; the regulation of surrogate motherhood in Greece is a typical example of the deleterious effects of the combination of legal formalism and legal moralism in contemporary Greece. ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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Having the cake and eating it too: efficient penalty clauses in Common and Civil contract law
In: International review of law and economics, Band 22, Heft 4, S. 381-406
ISSN: 0144-8188
Comment on B. Lemennicier's Paper
In: Journal des économistes et des études humaines: JEEH, Band 4, Heft 2-3, S. 263-268
ISSN: 2153-1552
From Nothing to Too Much: Regulatory Reform in Greece
In: NBER Working Paper No. 13/2007
SSRN
Working paper
Nineteenth annual conference of the European Association of Law and Economics Athens, Greece, September 2002
In: International review of law and economics, Band 23, Heft 4, S. 341-344
ISSN: 0144-8188
Rational After All: Toward an Improved Theory of Rationality in Economics
In: Revue de Philosophie Economique, Band 12, Heft 1
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The Foundations of a Market Economy: Contract, Consent, Coercion
In: European view: EV, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 29-37
ISSN: 1865-5831
This article shows how contracts are the institutional foundation of a market economy. Contracts create wealth, allocate risk and are based on consent. There is no perfect competition and the markets are characterised by a number of failures; therefore, contracts are not perfect. However, the existence of these failures does not undermine the importance of contract and consent. A common critique of the market economy is that most transactions are based on some form of coercion. The authors try to address this misconception by showing that a contract is the result of coercion not in cases where a choice is hard for a party but when it offers a choice the party does not want to accept.