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Focusing on the information economy, free trade exploitation, and confronting terrorist violence, Mark Findlay critiques law's regulatory commodification. Conventional legal regulatory modes such as theft and intellectual property are being challenged by waves of property access and use, which demand the rethinking of property 'rights' and their relationships with the law. Law's Regulatory Relevance? theorises how the law should reposition itself in order to help rather than hinder new pathways of market power, by confronting the dominant neo-liberal economic model that values property through scarcity. With in-depth analysis of empirical case studies, the author explores how law is returning to its communal utility in strengthening social ties, which will in turn restore property as social relations rather than market commodities. In a world of contested narratives about property valuing, law needs to ground its inherent regulatory relevance in the ordering of social change. This book is an essential read for students of law and regulation wanting to explore the contemporary dissent against neo-liberal market economies and the issues of communitarian governance and social resistance. It will also appeal to policy makers interested in law's failing regulatory capacity, particularly through criminalising attacks on conventional property rights, by offering insights into why law's regulatory relevance is at a cross-roads.--
Machine generated contents note: 1.Property rights and the regulation of immigrant labour -- 2.Private property relations and regulating the immigration-labour nexus -- 3.Private law, private property arrangements and inclusivity -- 4.Substantive inequality to contract? -- 5.Agents, pirates or slavers -- 6.Regulatory preferencing: a comparative study
In: International Political Economy Series
In: International Political Economy Ser.
Mark Findlay's treatment of regulatory sociability charts the anticipated and even inevitable transition to mutual interest which is the essence of taking communities from shared risk to shared fate. In the context of today's global crises, he explains that for the sake of sustainability, human diversity can bond in different ways to achieve fate
Machine generated contents note: IntroductionNew Moralities for International Criminal JusticeActivating Victim Constituency in ICJTruth and Responsibility v Fact and LiabilityTransformed Process Through Enhanced Discretionary PowerAccountability FrameworksJustice as Decision-making: Principal Pathways of InfluenceLegitimacy, Justice and GovernanceReferences
Crime is becoming as much a feature of the emergent globalized culture as other forms of consumerism. The Globalization of Crime presents an integrated theory of crime and social context and is the first book to challenge existing analyses of crime in the context of globalization
In: SMU Centre for AI & Data Governance Research Paper No. 2020/07
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In: SMU Centre for AI & Data Governance Research Paper No. 2020/09
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In: Singapore Management University School of Law Research Paper No. 7/2020
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In: Singapore Management University School of Law Research Paper No. 8/2020
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In: Singapore Academy of Law Journal, Band 28, S. 984-1013
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