The role of law in global value chains: a research manifesto




Grietje Baars, Jennifer Bair, Liam Campling, Dan Danielsen, Dennis Davis, Klaas Hendrik Eller, Dez Farkas, Tomaso Ferrando, Jason Jackson, David Hansen-Miller, Elizabeth Havice, Claire Mummé, Jesse Salah Ovadia, David Quentin, Brishen Rogers, Jaakko Salminen, Alvaro Santos, Benjamin Selwyn, Marlese von Broembsen, Lucie E. White

PublisherOxford University Press

2016

London Review of International Law

4

1

57

79

23

2050-6325

2050-6333

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/lril/lrw003

http://lril.oxfordjournals.org/content/4/1/57.full



Most scholars attribute the development and ubiquity of global value chains to economic forces, treating law as an exogenous factor, if at all. By contrast, we assert the centrality of legal regimes and private ordering mechanisms to the creation, structure, geography, distributive effects and governance of Global Value Chains (GVCs), and thereby seek to establish the study of law and GVCs as rich and important terrain for research in its own right.

     

    Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:17