'The fiduciary theory of government holds that governments and government officials only hold power in trust for the benefit of others; therefore they have special duties of fairness and good faith. Debating both the attractions and the problems of the fiduciary conception, these essays are a valuable addition to a growing literature.' Jack M. Balkin, Yale Law School
Introduction. Fiduciary government: provenance, promise, and pitfalls Evan J. Criddle, Evan Fox-Decent, Andrew S. Gold, Sung Hui Kim and Paul B. Miller; Part I. Modes of Governance: 1. Fiduciary representation Paul B. Miller; 2. Two problems of fiduciary government D. Theodore Rave; 3. Guardians of legal order: the dual commissions of public fiduciaries Evan J. Criddle and Evan Fox-Decent; 4. Fiduciary theory: the missing piece for positive rights Laura S. Underkuffler; Part II. Historical Approaches: 5. 'The state is a minor': fiduciary concepts of government in the Roman law of guardianship Daniel Lee; 6. Fiduciary government and government officers' incentives Nicholas R. Parrillo; Part III. The Problem of Legitimacy: 7. Fiduciary political theory and legitimacy Stephen R. Galoob and Ethan J. Leib; 8. The state as a wrongful fiduciary Andrew S. Gold; Part IV. Corruption and Breach of Trust: 9. The Supreme Court's fiduciary duty to forgo gifts Sung Hui Kim; 10. Congressional officials and the fiduciary duty of loyalty: lessons from corporate law Donna M. Nagy; 11. The American law of local officials as fiduciaries: lessons on fiduciary government's potential and limits Nadav Shoked; Part V. Skeptical Challenges: 12. Pluralism and the public trust Seth Davis; 13. The public trust Timothy Endicott.