Abstract
Autonomy-based theories of contracts tend to ascribe a rather modest role to the law and to conceptualize contract law as a unified body of doctrine governed by one regulative principle. But if autonomy stands for the commitment that people should, to some degree, be the authors of their own lives, both of these typical features are wrong or at least exaggerated. An autonomy-based contract law should be attentive to the pluralist prescription of offering people a sufficiently diverse set of robust frameworks to organize their various endeavors and interpersonal relationships. And it should actively empower people’s attempts to form collaborative contractual arrangements―both discrete and impersonal, as well as long-term and relational―by providing the necessary background regime for such risky undertakings.
Disciplines
Commercial Law | Consumer Protection Law | Contracts | Jurisprudence | Law
Date of this Version
7-2012
Recommended Citation
Hanoch Dagan, "AUTONOMY, PLURALISM, AND CONTRACT LAW THEORY" (July 2012). Tel Aviv University Law Faculty Papers. Working Paper 138.
http://law.bepress.com/taulwps/art138
Included in
Commercial Law Commons, Consumer Protection Law Commons, Contracts Commons, Jurisprudence Commons