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APPEAL WORKING GROUPS Page 1 of 4

Survey Response - Preamble

APPEAL Working Group

APPEAL is launching working groups for members and friends to explore a single topic in depth together on an ongoing basis, discussing readings, paper presentations and more.  These groups will provide an online opportunity for extended conversations and informal community-building while plans for in-person events remain on hold.   


The groups will be open to those who want to learn more about the topic as well as those with expertise.  Participants should aim to attend more than one session and to focus closely on the discussion material, respecting the group's goals and others' time and work.  Advance registration through APPEAL will be required


To participate in any of the groups below and to get further details, register here.   


2021-22 WORKING GROUPS


1)    Measuring and Managing Inflation in a World of Permanent Quantitative Easing and Extractive Intermediaries

Convener: Frank Pasquale, Brooklyn Law


This reading group is designed to open up conversations about inflation, breathing new life into discussions that are often mired in technical questions of measurement. We will explore the values behind the measurements-and the wide range of tactics government can take in order to promote inclusive prosperity by better measuring macroeconomic aggregates. Scholars like Nancy Folbre and Joseph Stiglitz have already demonstrated manifest inadequacies in the measurement of GDP. Now it is time for inflation to come under similar scrutiny.


2)    Household Finance- Unfortunately, due to changing commitments, we will not be able to convene the group this academic year. We appreciate your interest and encourage you to participate in APPEAL's other upcoming events.


This group will explore the shift in risks to households over recent decades, especially as households take on debt to pay for health, education, family care, housing, transportation, utilities and other basic human needs.  What legal, political, and economic changes have produced this insecurity, and what are the cumulative effects? What solutions are most promising?  How do the problems and solutions differ across nations and geographic regions? What different problems, ideas, and solutions does considering household finance from a global perspective add? 

  

3)    Constituting and Constitutionalizing Law and Political Economy  

Conveners:  Martha McCluskey, University at Buffalo Law, and Jamee Moudud, Sarah Lawrence College Economics


This group will examine the legal constitution of political economic power relations, both domestically and internationally.  We will consider both Constitutional law and the "small c" structures of governance such as money and employment.  Possible questions:  How does an LPE perspective change ideas about the division of powers between public and private, economic and social, local and central authority, national and international?  How are inequalities such as class, race, gender, geography (and more) embedded in these structures?  How do these structures shape human rights?   How do liberal governance structures legitimate poverty and violence?  What is the role of courts and  civil or criminal justice in an LPE vision of democracy?  

  

4)    Corporate Governance, Law, and Power 

Conveners:  Faith Stevelman, New York Law School and Sarah C.  Haan, Washington & Lee University School of Law


This group will bring political, social, historical, and institutional questions to the fore in examining business law and economics. We posit that our system of business laws and market regulations shape economic power in ways that powerfully affect modern life. We will explore how this occurs expressly, in terms of what these systems address, and implicitly, by way of what has been omitted and suppressed. 


For academic year 2021-'22 our focus is corporate law, governance, and climate change. We will look to developments at the SEC and the Federal Reserve, as well as actions taken by powerful institutional investors and law reformers, as they are reshaping the landscape of business law and climate change response. Inviting input from scholars in different fields, working in the U.S. and abroad, we plan to interrogate the ways that the structures of business laws and governance might change to promote greater well-being for people and the planet. 

 

5)    What is Capitalism?

Conveners:  Jamee Moudud (Sarah Lawrence College Economics); Martha McCluskey (University at Buffalo Law) and John Haskell (University of Manchester Law).


This group will continue to meet to explore the changing, multifaceted aspects of capitalism and its legal underpinnings.  Among our wide-ranging reading topics, we've discussed accounting history and the meaning of profit; labor and corporate governance; business power; the political economic of race and economic method; the legal construction of racialized care work; global governance of information capitalism; and extraction industries and the "rule of law."


6)    Law and Political Economy Perspectives on Cost-Benefit Analysis 

Convener:  Martha McCluskey, University of Buffalo Law 

Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is widely accepted as a means for evaluating and overseeing public policies governing climate change, health and safety, consumer protection, and financial regulation and more.  What assumptions, values, politics, and theories of law and economy embedded in various versions CBA?  How has CBA affected specific policies and practices, how could it be improved, and what alternative approaches to oversight and evaluation of regulatory policy. To explore these and other questions, we'll focus on recent public policy developments and debates, scholarly papers and presentations, and readings.   


Please click NEXT below to register for one or more of these working groups.