Constitutional Political Economy
Encyclopedia
Constitutional Political Economy is a journal on constitutional economics
Constitutional economics
Constitutional economics is a research program in economics and constitutionalism that has been described as extending beyond the definition of 'the economic analysis of constitutional law' in explaining the choice "of alternative sets of legal-institutional-constitutional rules that constrain the...

 published by Springer
Springer Science+Business Media
- Selected publications :* Encyclopaedia of Mathematics* Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete * Graduate Texts in Mathematics * Grothendieck's Séminaire de géométrie algébrique...

 since 1990. Originally triannual, it has been a quarterly since 1996.

The broad subject of the journal is constitutional analysis, including papers on theoretical and empirical research and on constitutional policy issues. An editorial statement describes the journal as based in economics but explicitly interdisciplinary in inviting dialogue across a range of social sciences, including law, philosophy, political science, and sociology. It expresses a shared interest across disciplines on the integration of the study of political, legal, and moral institutions into economic analysis.

Inaugural article

  • James M. Buchanan
    James M. Buchanan
    James McGill Buchanan, Jr. is an American economist known for his work on public choice theory, for which he received the 1986 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Buchanan's work initiated research on how politicians' self-interest and non-economic forces affect government economic policy...

    , 1990. "The Domain of Constitutional Economics," Constitutional Political Economy, 1(1), pp. 1-18, adapted as "Constitutional Political Economy" in C. K. Rowley and F. Schneider, ed., 2004, The Encyclopedia of Public Choice, v. 2, pp. 60-67.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK