Møller and Skaaning offer a much-needed systematization of the voluminous research that is transforming our knowledge about the rule of law. They acknowledge diverse conceptions of the rule of law. But they push far past the usual conceptual discussion. Rigorously blending theoretical and empirical analysis, Møller and Skaaning show how our conception of the rule of law informs how we describe trends around the world and what we think explains the rule of law. A timely and insightful book that will be of value to political scientists, economists and legal scholars who seek to understand the rule of law, and to practitioners in the field of governance who seek to promote the rule of law. Gerardo Munck, School of Letters, Arts and Sciences, University of South California, USA. Over the past several decades policymakers and social scientists have come to invoke the "rule of law" with the same reverence and wonderment that we reserve for other beneficent concepts such as justice, democracy, and good governance. Yet, a cloud of ambiguity follows this concept wherever it travels.
This book provides the first systematic treatment that is both conceptual and empirical. I suspect it will come to be regarded as authoritative. John Gerring, Department of Political Science, Boston University, USA The rule of law is simultaneously one of the most universally approved, and yet most imprecise concepts in the literature on political economy. The volume by Møller and Skaaning helps greatly by imposing some clarity with regard to definitions, as well as providing extremely useful discussions both of historical origins and approaches to empirical measurement of the rule of law. Francis Fukuyama, Freeman Spogli Institute of International Studies, Stanford University, USA.