Regulating Vice: Misguided Prohibitions and Realistic Controls

Regulating Vice: Misguided Prohibitions and Realistic Controls

by JimLeitzel (Author)

Synopsis

Regulating Vice provides a new, interdisciplinary lens for examining vice policy, and focuses that lens on traditional vices such as alcohol, nicotine, drugs, gambling, and commercial sex. Regulating Vice argues that public policies toward addictive activities should work well across a broad array of circumstances, including situations in which all participants are fully informed and completely rational, and other situations in which vice-related choices are marked by self-control lapses or irrationality. This precept rules out prohibitions of most private adult vice, and also rules out unfettered access to substances such as alcohol, tobacco, and cocaine. Sin taxes, advertising restrictions, buyer and seller licensing, and treatment subsidies are all potentially legitimate components of balanced vice policies. Regulating Vice brings a sophisticated and rigorous analysis to vice control issues, an analysis that applies to prostitution as well as drugs, to tobacco as well as gambling, while remaining accessible to a broad social science audience.

$34.21

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 316
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 05 Nov 2007

ISBN 10: 0521706602
ISBN 13: 9780521706605
Book Overview: Regulating Vice provides a new, interdisciplinary lens for examining vice policy.

Media Reviews
'Leitzel focuses on public policy towards traditional vices such as alcohol, nicotine, drugs, gambling and commercial sex. He explains why vice prohibitions are generally misguided, and also describes the dangers of unfettered access to alcohol, cocaine or heroin.' The Times Higher Education Supplement
...an accessible and wide-ranging book (largely due to the universality of vice), which, although U.S.-centric, is surely useful for students, academics and policy-makers worldwide. In disciplinary terms, it is accessible because of its relevance to legal, economic, and sociological study... --Michael Russell, Saskatchewan Law Review
...provides a refreshingly balanced framework in a field often dominated by loud moral judgments and polarized extremes. --Harvard Law Review
Author Bio
Jim Leitzel teaches public policy and economics at the University of Chicago. He received his PhD in economics from Duke University; he has taught at Vanderbilt University and Duke University, and served as the Academic Coordinator at the New Economic School in Moscow. Professor Leitzel has been a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, and an Atlantic Fellow in Public Policy based at the Department of Economics of the University of Essex. His research has concerned areas such as transition economics, gun control, and law and economics, and his previous books include Russian Economic Reform and The Political Economy of Rule Evasion and Policy Reform. Professor Leitzel works with the Economics Education and Research Consortium (EERC) in the former Soviet Union and the Bridging Research and Policy program of the Global Development Network (GDN). He is the founding member of Vice Squad (vicesquad.blogspot.com), a blog devoted to vice policy.