What Makes a Global Market? Reflections on Market Governance, Globalisation and the Law

2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 334-344
Author(s):  
Victoria Daskalova
Author(s):  
Gerard Lee McKeever

This chapter unearths a sweeping account of the Age of Improvement in John Galt’s brand of non-fictional fiction (‘theoretical history’). It finds Galt exploring the capacity of a modernising society to cope with localised, historically rooted and distinctive cultural forms. His narrative of improvement draws on the first Statistical Account of Scotland in both formal and thematic terms. In Annals of the Parish (1821) and The Entail (1823), local and national cultures can function as cohesive agents that remedy the destabilising effects of rapid change, yet they can also be perverted into a dark influence working to misdirect the effect of global market forces. Galt presents history as a contest over the volatile substance of ‘story’, which his novels rhetorically disavow. His analysis of the law of unintended consequences is permeated by a dry sense of humour. Yet by The Entail, Scottish history has become a catalogue of tragic failures, as the changes wrought by improvement fracture the nation into incompatible alternatives.


2011 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 299-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjay Pinto ◽  
Kate Macdonald ◽  
Shelley Marshall

2006 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 647-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gralf-Peter Calliess

Online dispute resolution (“ODR”) can be conceived as a means to achieve some of the most powerful legal ideals of the Western legal tradition. Among these are:(1) Legal Certainty: In making individual plans, decisions, and choices everyone is entitled to know what the law is in advance. Therefore, laws shall be public, written in everyday language, and shall not be changed too often. The application of laws shall be a simple operation (legal syllogism) so that citizens do not need attorneys, and judges are just la bouche de la loi (Montesquieu).


to-ra ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 247
Author(s):  
Hamdan Azhar Siregar

Development of cooperatives of small and medium-sized enterprises, has become an integral part of national economic development. The presence of cooperative small and medium enterprises start since its establishment until now a a pillarnational economy, it is also reinforced in UUD1945, Article 33, however, if observed the presence and contribution can not be equated with other forms of business such as private companies and SOEs and have not been able to compete in the global market. As time goes by and the dynamic changes in all fields, the law must be able to anticipate these changes, in this case the law should not be left behind with the changes, and may be in line withdevelopment it, otherwise the development and role of law in economic development is not running optimally , Therefore, the law and the economy should be run in parallel and the law is also needed as a social control to avoid collisions with one another. Legal perspective of the running of the economy and increasing economic competitivenesscommunity, especially cooperatives, legal development is carried out through the renewal of legal materials such as the Law on Cooperatives in order to anticipate and competitive flow of globalization, particularly the economic field, but with due regard pluralistic society prevailing legal order and in an attempt to increase certainty and legal protection, law enforcement and human rights (HAM), legal awareness and legal services based on justice and truth, order and prosperity, in the framework of the implementation of state increasingly orderly, organized, smoothly, and globally competitive.     Kata Kunci: Perspektif hukum dalam peningkatan Koperasi.


2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 72-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula Leslie ◽  
Mary Casper

“My patient refuses thickened liquids, should I discharge them from my caseload?” A version of this question appears at least weekly on the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's Community pages. People talk of respecting the patient's right to be non-compliant with speech-language pathology recommendations. We challenge use of the word “respect” and calling a patient “non-compliant” in the same sentence: does use of the latter term preclude the former? In this article we will share our reflections on why we are interested in these so called “ethical challenges” from a personal case level to what our professional duty requires of us. Our proposal is that the problems that we encounter are less to do with ethical or moral puzzles and usually due to inadequate communication. We will outline resources that clinicians may use to support their work from what seems to be a straightforward case to those that are mired in complexity. And we will tackle fears and facts regarding litigation and the law.


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