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Buchanan on Freedom

In: Public Choice, Past and Present

Author

Listed:
  • Geoffrey Brennan

    (Australian National University
    Duke University
    University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill)

  • Michael Brooks

    (University of Tasmania)

Abstract

Our object is to explicate Buchanan’s conception of individual liberty and to trace its connection to the “working themes” in his corpus-anarchy, contract, constitution, Pareto optimality, “public choice,” and so on. In doing so, we investigate a number of tensions in Buchanan’s conception—between a libertarian affinity with anarchy and constitutional contractarianism and that between procedural liberalism and classical liberalism.

Suggested Citation

  • Geoffrey Brennan & Michael Brooks, 2013. "Buchanan on Freedom," Studies in Public Choice, in: Dwight R. Lee (ed.), Public Choice, Past and Present, edition 127, chapter 0, pages 43-64, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:stpchp:978-1-4614-5909-5_4
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-5909-5_4
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Daniele Bertolini, 2019. "Constitutionalizing Leviathan: A Critique of Buchanan’s Conception of Lawmaking," Homo Oeconomicus: Journal of Behavioral and Institutional Economics, Springer, vol. 36(1), pages 41-69, October.
    2. Michael Brooks, 2015. "Analytic conservatism and analytic radicalism: Of understated distinctions and other analytical things," Constitutional Political Economy, Springer, vol. 26(4), pages 442-454, December.

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