Efficiency v. Justice

It only takes 16 pages of Blackwell's Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory before the attack on Law and Economics begins with a bang. In his introduction to property law, Columbia Law Professor Jeremy Waldron throws down the gauntlet:

In general, Law and Economics professors have made no attempt to show why we should be preoccupied with efficiency to the exclusion of all else, or why the law should take no interest in what has traditionally been regarded as its raison d'etre - namely justice.

My Contracts professor, Robert Scott, gets some attention in the subsequent chapter on contracts, but otherwise it looks like it'll be another 300 pages before I get to a thorough discussion of L&E.