Book contents
- New Private Law Theory
- New Private Law Theory
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- New Private Law Theory
- Part I Methods and Disciplines
- Part II Social Ordering, Constitutionalism and Private Law
- Part III Transactions and Risk: Private Law and the Market
- Part IV Persons and Organizations
- 18 Person, Civil Status and Private Law
- 19 Theory of the Corporation
- 20 Actors in Organizations
- 21 The Principal’s Decision
- 22 Organizations and Public Goods
- Part V Private Law (Rule-Setting) beyond the State
- Index
- References
22 - Organizations and Public Goods
from Part IV - Persons and Organizations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 April 2021
- New Private Law Theory
- New Private Law Theory
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- New Private Law Theory
- Part I Methods and Disciplines
- Part II Social Ordering, Constitutionalism and Private Law
- Part III Transactions and Risk: Private Law and the Market
- Part IV Persons and Organizations
- 18 Person, Civil Status and Private Law
- 19 Theory of the Corporation
- 20 Actors in Organizations
- 21 The Principal’s Decision
- 22 Organizations and Public Goods
- Part V Private Law (Rule-Setting) beyond the State
- Index
- References
Summary
This chapter investigates the triangular relationship between public goods, varieties of capitalism (VoC) and corporate social responsibility (CSR). It brings two strands of discourse together which usually do not interact and certainly not in relation to their economic implications. Varieties of capitalism do not seem to say much about public goods, at least not in terms of economics. In a legal perspective though the VoC discourse focuses on the institutional and organizational conditions of market economies, which determine who is in charge of public goods, the companies, the state or both.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- New Private Law TheoryA Pluralist Approach, pp. 414 - 434Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021