Rules for a Flat World
Autor Gillian K Hadfielden Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 iun 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190931827
ISBN-10: 0190931825
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 234 x 152 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190931825
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 234 x 152 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
[A] thought-provoking book.
Amid a surfeit of works which chronicle how technology has changed the modern world, this book stands out for its rigor and its elevated sense of purpose...Essential.
Overall, Rules for a Flat World is a valuable introduction...Its heady mix of down-to-earth readability and cutting-edge critique and imagination make it a must-read for engaging in this essential design process.
We give far too little thought to how our institutions work and whether they are doing their job in the midst of rapid social and technological change. This book is a treasure trove of fresh thinking on these deep topics."
Rules for a Flat World is a rare book: both an advocacy charter for a more rational and inclusive legal system, and a scholarly tome that tells the story of law, from ancient times to the contemporary. Hadfield's book makes for a most absorbing read and should be of interest to scholars and lay people alike."
A thoughtful and thought-provoking look at one of the compelling questions of our time: in the face of massive changes to commerce, culture, and community, can our legal systems and infrastructure adapt to keep pace with the change? Gillian Hadfield answers that question in the affirmative, but with a call to arms that anyone interested in the relationship between law and society should hear. Engagingly written, I highly recommend this book to lawyers, business people, and all of us who are caught up in the arc of global change."
Technology is putting stress on laws that were developed primarily for the industrial revolution. In this fantastic book, Hadfield shows how we got where we are, and demonstrates how markets can help build better law. This book is an essential and delightful read for anyone interested in economics, politics, international relations, the impact of technology on people, and, of course, law."
This important book is at once an education and a manifesto. Drawing on economics, jurisprudence and legal history, Hadfield argues with authority that our legal institutions are out of step with advances in the digital world. She calls for greater investment, innovation, and competition in legal services and, crucially, challenges lawyers and policymakers to think very differently about the future role of law in society."
Gillian Hadfield's Rules for a Flat World is a tour de force from an omnivorous intellect. Hadfield moves nimbly between history, sociology, law, and economics to explain how and why we built our modern legal system, and how complex changes in the global economy are forcing it to evolve. Hadfield makes clear that our increasingly wired world requires a new justice system, and opening the legal system to market-driven innovation is the best way to get there. Rules for a Flat World is an amazing accomplishment, and anyone who wants to clearly understand the trends driving change in law and society should put this book at the top of their reading list."
The last few decades have witnessed extraordinary growth in complex, efficient and digitized supply chains. These activities create wealth while posing unprecedented challenges for legal institutions. Modes for enforcing contracts had to change, and governments and private actors continue to experiment with responses to piracy of intellectual property and trade secrets. Gillian Hadfield brings uncommon clarity, reach, and depth to her analysis of these trends and their causes. Her important book will open the reader's eyes to the legal challenges shaping all the major economies of the world."
Gillian Hadfield brings together with remarkable clarity what I have seen and have struggled with for a long time in many countries, in many environments: not only do most justice systems not deliver the value they could and should, the design and production machine for getting them to deliver that value is also broken. For the sake of billions of our fellow global citizens and their aspirations we must open up to using markets more as 'problem solving engines', in particular in the lower income countries that are being told to mirror the models that have been used in the West. This is a must read for everybody who senses that good legal infrastructure is a prerequisite for almost everything else."
Read Rules for a Flat World
This book is a must read for anyone who believes the legal system can be improved or who wants better results from legal services spending. From an insightful, engaging, and charming exploration of the history of how we came to have our current legal system, to careful analogies to the transformation other industries have experienced in the digital age, to a set of prescriptions for change in the legal system to grow the global economy, Gillian Hadfield never disappoints. I never expected that I would say about a book on the legal system, "I couldn't put it down.""
Here in Silicon Valley we pride ourselves on producing radical technological innovations paying but little attention to the messy but critical legal and social issues that require equally radical innovation in our legal systems. In this engrossing book, Hadfield takes us from Athens to modern times to help set the stage for dealing with the kinds of legal complexities we are now starting to encounter, such as autonomous vehicles governed by machine learning algorithms or cloud computing that crosses so many international boundaries that governance issues become almost unfathomable. A fascinating book for fascinating times."
A must read if you have ever wondered why law is like it is. Should be compulsory reading for every law student, legal academic, practicing lawyer and regulator. Read it and be entertained, educated, enlightened and inspired to reimagine law as the platform for justice and economic development that this book so skillfully describes."
In Rules for a Flat World, Hadfield invites us to debate the basic function of law and whether the legal infrastructure we have today is enabling law to effectively play that role in our fast changing world. This debate is very germane in Africa still reeling under colonially inspired legal architecture far removed from the daily life of the people."
Hadfield takes the reader on an exhilarating journey toward her remarkable destination of markets for law and regulation, illuminating waypoints like Silicon Valley, Zimbabwe, and ancient Athens with insights from economics, history, political science, and law."
Rules for a Flat World brings crucial new insights to longstanding problems. Gillian Hadfield, a leading economist and legal scholar, offers an original and compelling account of how to reconstruct the regulatory structures necessary for a complex global economy. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned with fostering innovative and cost- effective legal institutions."
Amid a surfeit of works which chronicle how technology has changed the modern world, this book stands out for its rigor and its elevated sense of purpose...Essential.
Overall, Rules for a Flat World is a valuable introduction...Its heady mix of down-to-earth readability and cutting-edge critique and imagination make it a must-read for engaging in this essential design process.
We give far too little thought to how our institutions work and whether they are doing their job in the midst of rapid social and technological change. This book is a treasure trove of fresh thinking on these deep topics."
Rules for a Flat World is a rare book: both an advocacy charter for a more rational and inclusive legal system, and a scholarly tome that tells the story of law, from ancient times to the contemporary. Hadfield's book makes for a most absorbing read and should be of interest to scholars and lay people alike."
A thoughtful and thought-provoking look at one of the compelling questions of our time: in the face of massive changes to commerce, culture, and community, can our legal systems and infrastructure adapt to keep pace with the change? Gillian Hadfield answers that question in the affirmative, but with a call to arms that anyone interested in the relationship between law and society should hear. Engagingly written, I highly recommend this book to lawyers, business people, and all of us who are caught up in the arc of global change."
Technology is putting stress on laws that were developed primarily for the industrial revolution. In this fantastic book, Hadfield shows how we got where we are, and demonstrates how markets can help build better law. This book is an essential and delightful read for anyone interested in economics, politics, international relations, the impact of technology on people, and, of course, law."
This important book is at once an education and a manifesto. Drawing on economics, jurisprudence and legal history, Hadfield argues with authority that our legal institutions are out of step with advances in the digital world. She calls for greater investment, innovation, and competition in legal services and, crucially, challenges lawyers and policymakers to think very differently about the future role of law in society."
Gillian Hadfield's Rules for a Flat World is a tour de force from an omnivorous intellect. Hadfield moves nimbly between history, sociology, law, and economics to explain how and why we built our modern legal system, and how complex changes in the global economy are forcing it to evolve. Hadfield makes clear that our increasingly wired world requires a new justice system, and opening the legal system to market-driven innovation is the best way to get there. Rules for a Flat World is an amazing accomplishment, and anyone who wants to clearly understand the trends driving change in law and society should put this book at the top of their reading list."
The last few decades have witnessed extraordinary growth in complex, efficient and digitized supply chains. These activities create wealth while posing unprecedented challenges for legal institutions. Modes for enforcing contracts had to change, and governments and private actors continue to experiment with responses to piracy of intellectual property and trade secrets. Gillian Hadfield brings uncommon clarity, reach, and depth to her analysis of these trends and their causes. Her important book will open the reader's eyes to the legal challenges shaping all the major economies of the world."
Gillian Hadfield brings together with remarkable clarity what I have seen and have struggled with for a long time in many countries, in many environments: not only do most justice systems not deliver the value they could and should, the design and production machine for getting them to deliver that value is also broken. For the sake of billions of our fellow global citizens and their aspirations we must open up to using markets more as 'problem solving engines', in particular in the lower income countries that are being told to mirror the models that have been used in the West. This is a must read for everybody who senses that good legal infrastructure is a prerequisite for almost everything else."
Read Rules for a Flat World
This book is a must read for anyone who believes the legal system can be improved or who wants better results from legal services spending. From an insightful, engaging, and charming exploration of the history of how we came to have our current legal system, to careful analogies to the transformation other industries have experienced in the digital age, to a set of prescriptions for change in the legal system to grow the global economy, Gillian Hadfield never disappoints. I never expected that I would say about a book on the legal system, "I couldn't put it down.""
Here in Silicon Valley we pride ourselves on producing radical technological innovations paying but little attention to the messy but critical legal and social issues that require equally radical innovation in our legal systems. In this engrossing book, Hadfield takes us from Athens to modern times to help set the stage for dealing with the kinds of legal complexities we are now starting to encounter, such as autonomous vehicles governed by machine learning algorithms or cloud computing that crosses so many international boundaries that governance issues become almost unfathomable. A fascinating book for fascinating times."
A must read if you have ever wondered why law is like it is. Should be compulsory reading for every law student, legal academic, practicing lawyer and regulator. Read it and be entertained, educated, enlightened and inspired to reimagine law as the platform for justice and economic development that this book so skillfully describes."
In Rules for a Flat World, Hadfield invites us to debate the basic function of law and whether the legal infrastructure we have today is enabling law to effectively play that role in our fast changing world. This debate is very germane in Africa still reeling under colonially inspired legal architecture far removed from the daily life of the people."
Hadfield takes the reader on an exhilarating journey toward her remarkable destination of markets for law and regulation, illuminating waypoints like Silicon Valley, Zimbabwe, and ancient Athens with insights from economics, history, political science, and law."
Rules for a Flat World brings crucial new insights to longstanding problems. Gillian Hadfield, a leading economist and legal scholar, offers an original and compelling account of how to reconstruct the regulatory structures necessary for a complex global economy. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned with fostering innovative and cost- effective legal institutions."
Notă biografică
Gillian K. Hadfield holds the Schwartz Reisman Chair in Technology and Society, and is Professor of Law, and Professor of Strategic Management at the University of Toronto. She serves as Director of the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society and is Faculty Affiliate at the Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Senior Policy Advisor at OpenAI. She has served on the Councils on Agile Governance; Values, Policy, and Technology; and Justice for the World Economic Forum.