Rules for a flat world : why humans invented law and how to reinvent it for a complex global economy / Gillian Hadfield.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | K487.E3 .H333 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000348122 | |
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Main Library | K487.E3 .H333 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000348139 |
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K487 .E3 H37 2011 Law and economics in a nutshell / | K487 .P75 K36 2010 Psychology and law : a critical introduction / | K487.C8 .M36 2015 Managing family justice in diverse societies / | K487.E3 .H333 2017 Rules for a flat world : why humans invented law and how to reinvent it for a complex global economy / | K487.M43 .J87 2017 Justices and journalists : the global perspective / | K487.S3 .C37 2015 The ecology of law : toward a legal system in tune with nature and community / | K 5000 .S828 2011 ضمانات المحكوم عليه : مرحلة التنفيذ العقابي : دراسة قانونية مقارنة / |
"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 political and legal boundaries. This is the economy of the twenty-first century, characterized by ever-expanding global supply chains and communication systems. In 2005, Thomas Friedman reduced this phenomenon to one phrase, the title of his massively successful book: The World is Flat. Of course, the phrase is misleading. The world may be getting flatter in some places, but there are still many factors that tilt the odds in favor of some locations over others. Law and economics professor Gillian Hadfield picks up where Friedman's book left off, by peeling back the technological layer to look at what lies beneath-our legal infrastructure-and argues that the outdated legal system is, in fact, largely responsible for our still-slanted world. Put simply, the law and legal methods on which we currently rely have failed to evolve along with technology. Hadfield argues that not only are these systems too slow, costly, and localized to support economic complexity, they also fail to address looming challenges such as global warming, poverty, and oppression in developing countries. The answer, however, is not the one critics usually reach for-to have less of it. Through a sweeping review of law and the world economy over thousands of years, Hadfield makes the case for building a legal environment that does more of what we need it to do and less of what we don't. Hadfield offers, in engaging and accessible prose, a model for a more market- and globally-oriented legal system. Combining an impressive grasp of economic globalization with an ambitious re-envisioning of our global legal system, Rules for a Flat World will transform our understanding of how to best achieve a more sustainable and vibrant global economy."-- Provided by publisher.
"The law and legal methods on which we currently rely have failed to evolve along with technology. In Rules for a Flat World, Gillian Hadfield shows us that law provides critical infrastructure for the cooperation and collaboration on which economic growth is built. Recognizing the importance of this infrastructure, along with the insufficiencies of the current system, is the first step to building a legal environment that does more of what we need it to do and less of what we don't"-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Preface -- Part I. Why did humans invent law? : Rethinking what we mean by law -- The invention of law -- Law and the dancing landscape -- Part II. Global economic complexity: what's law got to do with it? : The birth of modern legal infrastructure -- Building a stable platform for complexity -- The flat world -- The limits of complexity and the cost of law -- Part III. Harnessing markets for legal innovation : Problem-solving through markets -- Markets for lawyers -- Markets for rules -- Part IV. Global legal innovation : Life in the BoP -- Building law for the BoP -- Global markets for BoP legal infrastructure -- Conclusion.
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