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This book studies the rise of access and the effect of the sharing economy on property as a social and legal institution. It will benefit academics, students, policymakers and practitioners interested in the sharing economy, property, legal theory, and more broadly, internet and society, market economy, and law and society.
Table des matières
Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction; 2. Stability and property use; 3. The decline of stability in the new millennium; 4. The rise of the access economy; 5. Access as an alternative to ownership; 6. Fragmentation of intimate property; 7. Evaluating flexibility in property use; 8. What's next? The future of the access economy; 9. Conclusion.
A propos de l'auteur
Shelly Kreiczer-Levy is an Associate Professor of Law (Senior Lecturer) and the head of the visiting scholar program at the College of Law and Business, Ramat Gan, Israel. She holds an LL. B. (2004) and a Ph.D. (2009) from Tel Aviv University law school and has clerked for Israel's Supreme Court Chief Justice, Aharon Barak (2003–2004). She served as the President of the Israeli Association of Private Law and was the recipient of the Zeltner Award for Young Promising Scholars (2016). She has taught at Cornell Law School and served as a Visiting Scholar or Researcher at Yale University, Connecticut, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and Emory University, Atlanta.
Résumé
This book studies the rise of access and the effect of the sharing economy on property as a social and legal institution. It will benefit academics, students, policymakers and practitioners interested in the sharing economy, property, legal theory, and more broadly, internet and society, market economy, and law and society.