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Sessions Information
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January 7, 2022
12:35 pm - 1:50 pm
Session Type: AALS Discussion Groups
Session Capacity: N/A
Location: N/A
Room: N/A
Floor: N/A
Emergent forces emanating from social and financial technologies are challenging many underlying assumptions about the workings of markets, the nature of firms, and our social relationship with our economic institutions. Blockchain technologies challenge our assumptions about the need for centralization, trust, and financial institutions. Meme trading puts pressure on our assumptions about economic value and market processes. Environmental and social governance initiatives raise important questions about the relationship between economic institutions and social values. These issues will certainly drive policy debates about social and economic good in the coming years.
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Session Speakers
Mississippi College School of Law
Moderator
Brooklyn Law School
Discussant
University of Toledo College of Law
Discussant
Michigan State University College of Law
Discussant
Belmont University College of Law
Moderator
University of Arkansas School of Law
Discussant
Rutgers Law School
Discussant
Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
Discussant
University of Tennessee College of Law
Discussant
Penn State Law
Discussant
Emory University School of Law
Discussant
Drake University Law School
Discussant
Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Duquesne University
Discussant
SMU Dedman School of Law
Discussant
Louisiana State University, Paul M. Hebert Law Center
Discussant
University of Colorado Law School
Speaker
Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University
Discussant
Washington and Lee University School of Law
Discussant
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Session Fees
- AALS Discussion Group Program - A Very Online Economy: Meme Trading, Bitcoin, and the Crisis of Trust and Value(s) – How Should the Law Respond?: $0.00
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