Rules for a flat world : why humans invented law and how to reinvent it for a complex global economy /

" If you want a simple representation of the twentieth-century economy, picture a large corporation as a box. To do the same for today's economy, though, we need to blow up that box and reassemble the pieces into a network. The network is global, stretching across the planet untethered to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hadfield, Gillian K. (Gillian Kereldena)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2017
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Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note:
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1: Rethinking what we mean by law
  • Chapter 2: The invention of law
  • Chapter 3: Law and the dancing landscape
  • Chapter 4: The birth of modern legal infrastructure
  • Chapter 5: Building a stable platform for complexity
  • Chapter 6: The flat world
  • Chapter 7: The limits of complexity and the cost of law
  • Chapter 8: Problem-solving through markets
  • Chapter 9: Markets for lawyers
  • Chapter 10: Markets for rules
  • Chapter 11: Life in the BoP
  • Chapter 12: Building law for the BoP
  • Chapter 13: Global markets for BoP legal infrastructure
  • Conclusion