Special Issue: Socialising Economic Relationships: A Critique of Business Regulation
Guest Editors: Bettina Lange and Dania Thomas
Full Issue
Articles
Foreword
Abstract 299 | NILQ 62.4.1 Cox Downloads 223Page 391-392
Socialising economic relationships: a critique of business regulation – introduction
Abstract 399 | NILQ 62.4.2 Lange Downloads 362Page 393-399
Part I: Conceptual perspectives
Reading the story of law and embeddedness through a community lens: a Polanyi-meets-Cotterrell economic sociology of law?
Abstract 651 | NILQ 62.4.3 Perry-Kessaris Downloads 564Page 401-413
'Reform or revolution'? Polanyian versus Marxian perspectives on the regulation of the economic
Abstract 631 | NILQ 62.4.4 Baars Downloads 623Page 415-431
Part II: How to embed economic in social relationships?
From black box to glocalised player? Corporate personality in the twenty-first century and the scope of law’s regulatory reach
Abstract 339 | NILQ 62.4.5 Wilson Downloads 437Page 433-449
Polanyi’s embeddedness and shareholder stewardship: a contextual analysis of current Anglo-American perspectives on corporate governance
Abstract 425 | NILQ 62.4.6 Talbot Downloads 447Page 451-468
From codes of conduct to international framework agreements: contractualising the protection of human rights
Abstract 321 | NILQ 62.4.7 Marzo Downloads 385Page 469-484
UNCITRAL, security rights and the globalisation of the US Article 9
Abstract 393 | NILQ 64.2.8 McCormack Downloads 858Page 485-504
Cooperativism in a credit crisis: lessons from the Argentine worker takeovers
Abstract 305 | NILQ 62.4.9 Thomas Downloads 418Page 505-521
Part III: Competition law as a form of embedding economic relationships
The concept of perfect competition as the law of economics: addressing the homonymy problem
Abstract 398 | NILQ 62.4.10 Andriychuk Downloads 643Page 523-538
Did Lloyds/HBOS mark the failure of an enduring economics-based system of merger regulation?
Abstract 488 | NILQ 62.4.11 Stephan Downloads 1113Page 539-552
The transformation of broadcasting: public service broadcasting, the BBC and the distortion of new media markets
Abstract 424 | NILQ 62.4.12 Harker Downloads 613Page 553-568