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  1. James E. Krier is the Earl Warren DeLano Professor Emeritus of Law at the University of Michigan. He has taught courses on contracts, property, trusts and estates, behavioral law and economics, and pollution policy.

  2. James E. Krier is the Earl Warren DeLano Professor Emeritus of Law at the University of Michigan Law School. His teaching and research interests are primarily in the fields of property, contracts, and law and economics, and he teaches or has taught courses on contracts, property, trusts and estates, behavioral law and economics, and ...

  3. James E. Kriet For legal scholars, the evolution of property rights has been a topic in search of a theory. My aim here is to draw together various accounts (some of them largely neglected in the legal literature), from dated to modern, and suggest a way they can be melded into a

    • James E. Krier
    • 2009
  4. James E. Krier I NTRODUCTION “Evolution” refers, in the most general sense of the term, to a process of gradual change, so it goes without saying that property rights have, in this sense, evolved. There were at the very beginning no such rights among humans, then some primitive rights appeared, followed eventually by developments that

    • James E. Krier
    • 2008
  5. Law & Economics Working Papers Archive: 2003-2009. University of Michigan Law School. Year 2009. Evolutionary Theory and the Origin of Property Rights. James E. Krier. University of Michigan Law School, jkrier@umich.edu. This paper is posted at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository.

    • James E. Krier
    • 2009
  6. James E. Krier, the Earl Warren DeLano Professor Emeritus of Law, has taught courses on contracts, property, trusts and estates, behavioral law and economics, and pollution policy.

  7. James Krier is the Earl Warren DeLano Professor at the University of Michigan Law School. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin and its Law School, he taught law at the University of California, Los Angeles, and at Stanford University before joining the Michigan faculty in 1983.