December 13, 2015

Two New Books from Alberto Alemanno, "Nudge and the Law" and "Regulating Lifestyle Risks"

Network member Alberto Alemanno (HEC-Paris) has let us know that he has two new collective volumes out.  The first, Nudge and the Law: A European Perspective, co-edited with Anne-Lise Sibony (Louvain) and with a Foreword by Cass Sunstein (Harvard), has appeared from Hart.  The second, Regulating Lifestyle Risks: The EU, Alcohol, Tobacco and Unhealthy Diets, co-edited with Amandine Garde (Liverpool), has appeared from Cambridge.  The publishers' blurbs are below and more details can be found here and here.

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Behavioural sciences help refine our understanding of human decision-making. Their insights are immensely relevant for policy-making since public intervention works much better when it targets real people rather than imaginary beings assumed to be perfectly rational. Increasingly, governments around the world are keen to rely on those insights for reshaping public interventions in a wide range of policy areas such as energy, health, financial services and data protection. When policy-making meets behavioural sciences, effective and low-cost regulations can emerge in the form of default rules, smart disclosure and simplification requirements. While behaviourally-informed intervention has a huge potential for policymaking, it also attracts legitimacy and practicability concerns. Nudge and the Law takes a European perspective on those issues and explores the legal implications of the emergent phenomenon of behavioural regulation by focusing on the challenges and opportunities it may offer to EU policy-making and beyond. 




This collection of essays looks at the role the European Union could and should play in promoting healthier lifestyle, in light of the moral, philosophical, legal and political challenges associated with the regulation of individual choices. By tackling the main non-communicable diseases (NCD) risk factors (tobacco consumption, harmful use of alcohol, unhealthy diets and lack of physical activity), the contributors endeavour to identify common themes and determine whether and, if so, to what extent the lessons learned in relation to each area of EU intervention could be transposed to the others. By focusing on the European Union legal order, the book highlights both the opportunities that legal instruments offer for NCD prevention and control agenda in Europe, as well as the constraints that the law imposes on policy-makers.

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