Is 'Global Value Chain‘ a Legal Concept? Situating Contract Law in Discourses Around Global Production

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2020
Journal European Review of Contract Law
Volume | Issue number 16 | 1
Pages (from-to) 3-24
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL)
  • Interfacultary Research
Abstract
Today’s organization of production and services along global value chains (GVCs) uses contracts as central building blocks, yet is largely disconnected from contract law’s dominant epistemology and social imaginary. This article charts when, how and why GVCs have appeared on the radar of contract scholars and unravels the related methodological and disciplinary challenges. Rather than treating GVCs as a ‘legal concept’ in a strict sense that might command the application of particular rules, I propose to understand them as a ‘legal heuristic’: GVCs require contract law to revisit its constitutive role for matters of distribution, participation and equality under globalization. Towards this, GVCs need to be understood as organizational arrangement and simultaneously as a stage in the evolution of a global political economy. Beyond the classical confines of ‘contract governance’, this brings into the picture the wide array of formal and informal technologies of ‘contract governmentality’. Together with the material, technological or informational infrastructure, these are referred to as ‘code’ of GVCs, suggested here as focus of future contract law research on GVCs.
Document type Article
Note © 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston. - In special issue: Reimagining Contract in a World of Global Value Chains.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1515/ercl-2020-0002
Downloads
10.1515_ercl-2020-0002 (Final published version)
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