Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2010
This study is to serve in two capacities: first, as a prehistory to the “new institutional economics” of the late twentieth century; second, as an effort to synthesize, or at least analyze, one central aspect of the highly diverse literature of nineteenth-century “historical” and “institutional” economics. That aspect is the centrality of law.
The “new science” is identified as a research program within political economy. Its aim was to explain, using the methodologically individualist terms characteristic of economic discourse, the working rules of human society, with a special premium attaching to the sort of covering laws that could account for the longitudinal and cross-sectional diversity of social experience. By this definition, the college of the new science included members of the German and English Historical Schools (notably Wilhelm Roscher, Karl Knies, Gustav Schmoller, Adolph Wagner, and Karl Bucher), early American institutionalists (notably John R. Commons), and many others (notably Émile de Laveleye, Carl Menger, Achille Loria, and Max Weber).
The origins of the new science are traced to the growing prestige of determinism and the evolutionary concept in nineteenth-century social thought. The economic approach to law was developed first and most fully in the German universities, where the two disciplines had long been associated in the curriculum of Staatswissenschaft, or the “science of state.”
It is difficult to capture the essence of the new science in a simple formula. On the one hand, its analytical center of gravity strongly resembled that of today's “new institutional economics.”
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