Reconsidering the principal components of central bank independence: The more the merrier? King BanaianRichard C.K. BurdekinThomas D. Willett OriginalPaper Pages: 1 - 12
A neo-Downsian model of group-oriented voting and racial backlash Amihai GlazerBernard GrofmanGuillermo Owen OriginalPaper Pages: 23 - 34
Endogenous elections, electoral budget cycles and Canadian provincial governments Bradford G. Reid OriginalPaper Pages: 35 - 48
Observed choice and optimism in estimating the effects of government policies Eric Rasmusen OriginalPaper Pages: 65 - 92
Entry barriers and medical board funding autonomy Shirley SvornyEugenia Froedge Toma OriginalPaper Pages: 93 - 106
Corruption and government size: A disaggregated analysis Rajeev K. GoelMichael A. Nelson OriginalPaper Pages: 107 - 120
Legislative systems with absolute party discipline: Implications for the agency theory approach to the constituent-legislator link Neil Longley OriginalPaper Pages: 121 - 141
Persistence in government spending fluctuations: New evidence on the displacement effect Brian Goff OriginalPaper Pages: 141 - 157
Does the median voter model explain the size of government?: Evidence from the states Miguel GouveiaNeal A. Masia OriginalPaper Pages: 159 - 177
Patrick Riley, Leibniz' universal jurisprudence: Justice as the charity of the wise. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996. xiii + 338 pages. $39.95 (cloth). Mikhail G. Filippov BookReview Pages: 197 - 200
Jerry L. Mashaw, Greed, chaos, and governance: Using public choice to improve public law. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997. ix + 231 pages. $28.00 (cloth). Daniel Baracskay BookReview Pages: 200 - 204
Nicholas Mercuro and Steven G. Medema, Economics and the law: From Posner to post-modernism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997. x + 235 pages. $29.95 (cloth). Jim Chen BookReview Pages: 205 - 209
Mark Irving Lichbach, The cooperator's dilemma. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996. xx + 309 pages. $39.50 (cloth). Stephen Knack BookReview Pages: 209 - 212
William F. Shughart II (Ed.), Taxing choice: The predatory politics of fiscal discrimination. An Independent Institute Book. Foreword by Paul W. McCracken. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1997. xv + 396 pages. $39.95 (cloth); $19.95 (paper). Robert D. Tollison BookReview Pages: 212 - 213
Dani Rodrik, Has globalization gone too far? Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics, 1997. xi + 108 pages. $20.95 (cloth). Paul Pecorino BookReview Pages: 214 - 217