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Research Handbook on Political Economy and Law [Kõva köide]

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Events such as the global financial crisis have helped reveal that the drivers and contours of governance on a national and international level remain a mystery in many respects. This is so despite the ever-increasing complexity and sophistication in the management and understanding of economic, legal and political spheres of global society. Set in this context, this timely Research Handbook is the first to explicitly address the constitutive relationship between law and political economy.With scholarly contributions from diverse disciplinary and geographic backgrounds, this authoritative book provides an expansive overview of the legal architecture of the global political economy. It covers, in three parts, topics surrounding money and markets, the relations of organization, and commodities, land and resources.

Scholars and policymakers as well as undergraduate and postgraduate law students interested in the intersection of socio-political, economic, and legal dynamics of governance will find this book a thought-provoking and insightful resource.

Contributors: A. Andreoni, G. Baars, S. Bailey, B. Bowring, T.A. Canova, D. Danielsen, J. Desautels-Stein, J. Ellis, A. Gupta, F. Guy, A. Hanieh, I. Isailovi , V. Kishore, R. Kreitner, T. Krever, P. Luff, T. Mahmud, B.N. Mamlyuk, M. McCluskey, R. Míguez, C. Mummé, A. Ng Boyte, Ö. Orhangazi, U. Özsu, A. Rasulov, L. Russi, C. Salom o Filho, P. Skott, J. Toporowski, R.A. Woodcock, L.R. Wray

Arvustused

'Law creates and regulates our political and economic life. If the legal institutions of citizenship and political authority, property and contract, money and credit, or labor and capital were put together differently, our world might be more equal, productive, democratic, sustainable and just. This terrific collection explores how this might be done. Each essay puts law at the center of a story about political economy and asks how things might be otherwise. Original, broad-reaching and imaginative, these essays will change how you think about the world: what seemed natural and inevitable will seem open to rethinking and remaking. An excellent overview of law's role in contemporary political economy by some of the most creative thinkers in the legal academy today.' -- David Kennedy, Harvard Law School, US

List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Acknowledgements xiii
1 Introduction
1(6)
John D. Haskell
Ugo Mattei
PART I MONEY AND MARKETS
2 Toward a political economy of money
7(22)
Roy Kreitner
3 The market as a legal concept: classic liberalism, modern liberalism, pragmatic liberalism
29(15)
Justin Desautels-Stein
4 The new global dis/order in central banking and public finance
44(25)
Timothy A. Canova
5 Neoliberalism, debt and discipline
69(21)
Tayyab Mahmud
6 Free trade and comparative advantage: a study in economic sleight of hand
90(15)
Vishaal Kishore
7 Technology, power and the political economy of inequality
105(15)
Frederick Guy
Peter Skott
8 Finance and the `real' economy: systemic complexity, complex agencies
120(18)
Luigi Russi
9 Financialization and the nonfinancial corporate sector
138(13)
Ozgur Orhangazi
10 Debt and financial stability
151(7)
Jan Toporowski
11 The law of value and the law
158(19)
Bill Bowring
12 Less markets: a critical analysis of market existence and functioning
177(18)
Calixto Salomao Filho
PART II THE RELATIONS OF ORGANIZATION: INDUSTRY, LABOUR AND THE STATE
13 Beyond corporate governance: why a new approach to the study of corporate law is needed to address global inequality and economic development
195(10)
Dan Danielsen
14 The job guarantee, full employment and human rights
205(22)
L. Randall Wray
15 Personal responsibility for systemic inequality
227(19)
Martha McCluskey
16 From the `semi-civilized state' to the `emerging market': remarks on the international legal history of the semi-periphery
246(14)
Umut Ozsu
17 From the Dutch East India Company to the Corporate Bill of Rights: corporations and international law
260(20)
Grietje Baars
18 Mapping the political economy of neoliberalism in the Arab world
280(18)
Adam Hanieh
19 Ending impunity? Eliding political economy in international criminal law
298(17)
Tor Krever
20 The political economy of court-based regulation
315(12)
Patrick Luff
21 Law and development: a history in three moments
327(15)
Arpita Gupta
22 The political economy of industrial policy: after the crisis, back on the agenda
342(29)
Antonio Andreoni
PART III COMMODITIES, LAND AND RESOURCES
23 The empty circularity of regulatory takings: the legacy of a legal realist critique for a 21st-century context
371(29)
Akbar Rasulov
24 Property in labour and the limits of contract
400(22)
Claire Mumme
25 Property issues in the indigenous historical contexts of republican Latin America
422(14)
Rodrigo Miguez
26 Indigenous peoples' claims and challenges over control of property
436(18)
Ivana Isailovic
27 Early Soviet property law in comparison with Western legal traditions
454(27)
Boris N. Mamlyuk
28 The architecture of commons legal institutions
481(15)
Saki Bailey
29 Political economy and environmental law: a cost-benefit analysis
496(21)
Jaye Ellis
30 The propertization of intellectual property
517(14)
Alina Ng Boyte
31 Property, efficiency, the commons, and theft
531(32)
Ramsi A. Woodcock
Index 563
Edited by Ugo Mattei, University of California, Hastings, US, International University College, Collegio Carlo Alberto and University of Turin, Italy and John D. Haskell, University of Manchester, UK