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Overview

The idea that the state is a fiduciary to its citizens has a long pedigree - ultimately reaching back to the ancient Greeks, and including Hobbes and Locke among its proponents. Public fiduciary theory is now experiencing a resurgence, with applications that range from international law, to insider trading by members of Congress, to election law and gerrymandering. This book is the first of its kind: a collection of chapters by leading writers on public fiduciary subject areas. The authors develop new accounts of how fiduciary principles apply to representation; to officials and judges; to problems of legitimacy and political obligation; to positive rights; to the state itself; and to the history of ideas. The resulting volume should be of great interest to political theorists and public law scholars, to private fiduciary law scholars, and to students seeking an introduction to this new and increasingly relevant area of study.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108680011
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 11/15/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Evan J. Criddle is a Professor at William and Mary Law School. His books include Fiduciaries of Humanity: How International Law Constitutes Authority (2016) (with Evan Fox-Decent) and The Oxford Handbook of Fiduciary Law (forthcoming) (co-edited with Paul B. Miller and Robert H. Sitkoff). He has authored ground breaking articles on fiduciary government in the Cornell Law Review, Northwestern University Law Review, Texas Law Review, and UCLA Law Review.
Evan Fox-Decent is Professor of Law of McGill University's Faculty of Law. His first monograph, Sovereignty's Promise: The State as Fiduciary (2011), was short-listed for the C. B. Macpherson Prize awarded annually by the Canadian Political Science Association for best book related to political theory. His second monograph, with Evan J. Criddle, is Fiduciaries of Humanity: How International Law Constitutes Authority (2016), and develops a novel account of international law based on fiduciary precepts.
Andrew S. Gold is Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School. He has also been the Bruce W. Nichols Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School; an H. L. A. Hart Visiting Fellow at the University of Oxford; and a Fulbright Visiting Research Chair at McGill University, Montréal. He is the co-editor of several volumes, including Philosophical Foundations of Fiduciary Law (2014) (co-edited with Paul Miller), Contract, Status, and Fiduciary Law (2016) (co-edited with Paul Miller), the Research Handbook of Fiduciary Law (2018) (co-edited with D. Gordon Smith), The Oxford Handbook of New Private Law (forthcoming) (co-edited with John Goldberg, Daniel Kelly, Emily Sherwin, and Henry Smith). He is also a co-founder of the North American Workshop on Private Law Theory.
Sung Hui Kim is Professor of Law at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, where she teaches and writes on corporate law, securities law and professional responsibility. Her scholarship has appeared in Capital Markets Law Journal, Cornell Law Review, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, UCLA Law Review, Securities Law Review and University of Chicago Press. She has co-authored Professional Responsibility: A Contemporary Approach, 3rd edition (2017) and co-edited Can Delaware Be Dethroned?: Evaluating Delaware's Dominance of Corporate Law (2018). Before law teaching, she served as general counsel for Red Bull North America, Inc. after a career in corporate transactional practice.
Paul B. Miller is Professor of Law and Associate Dean for International and Graduate Programs at Notre Dame Law School. Miller is a leading private law theorist whose work focuses on philosophical questions in fiduciary law, trust law, and corporate law. He is a co-founder and co-organizer of two leading academic conferences in his field – the annual North American Workshop on Private Law Theory, and the annual Fiduciary Law Workshop. He has co-edited Philosophical Foundations of Fiduciary Law (2014), Contract, Status, and Fiduciary Law (2016), and The Oxford Handbook of Fiduciary Law (forthcoming).

Table of Contents

Introduction. Fiduciary government: provenance, promise, and pitfalls Evan J. Criddle, Evan Fox-Decent, Andrew S. Gold, Sung Hui Kim and Paul B. Miller; Part I. Modes of Governance: 1. Fiduciary representation Paul B. Miller; 2. Two problems of fiduciary government D. Theodore Rave; 3. Guardians of legal order: the dual commissions of public fiduciaries Evan J. Criddle and Evan Fox-Decent; 4. Fiduciary theory: the missing piece for positive rights Laura S. Underkuffler; Part II. Historical Approaches: 5. 'The state is a minor': fiduciary concepts of government in the Roman law of guardianship Daniel Lee; 6. Fiduciary government and government officers' incentives Nicholas R. Parrillo; Part III. The Problem of Legitimacy: 7. Fiduciary political theory and legitimacy Stephen R. Galoob and Ethan J. Leib; 8. The state as a wrongful fiduciary Andrew S. Gold; Part IV. Corruption and Breach of Trust: 9. The Supreme Court's fiduciary duty to forgo gifts Sung Hui Kim; 10. Congressional officials and the fiduciary duty of loyalty: lessons from corporate law Donna M. Nagy; 11. The American law of local officials as fiduciaries: lessons on fiduciary government's potential and limits Nadav Shoked; Part V. Skeptical Challenges: 12. Pluralism and the public trust Seth Davis; 13. The public trust Timothy Endicott.
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