10 research outputs found

    Debating Transformations of National Citizenship

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    This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship

    Debating Transformations of National Citizenship

    Get PDF
    This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship

    Open Problems in DAOs

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    Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) are a new, rapidly-growing class of organizations governed by smart contracts. Here we describe how researchers can contribute to the emerging science of DAOs and other digitally-constituted organizations. From granular privacy primitives to mechanism designs to model laws, we identify high-impact problems in the DAO ecosystem where existing gaps might be tackled through a new data set or by applying tools and ideas from existing research fields such as political science, computer science, economics, law, and organizational science. Our recommendations encompass exciting research questions as well as promising business opportunities. We call on the wider research community to join the global effort to invent the next generation of organizations

    The Authority of Distributed Consensus Systems Trust, Governance, and Normative Perspectives on Blockchains and Distributed Ledgers

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    The subjects of this dissertation are distributed consensus systems (DCS). These systems gained prominence with the implementation of cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin. This work aims at understanding the drivers and motives behind the adoption of this class of technologies, and to – consequently – evaluate the social and normative implications of blockchains and distributed ledgers. To do so, a phenomenological account of the field of distributed consensus systems is offered, then the core claims for the adoption of systems are taken into consideration. Accordingly, the relevance of these technologies on trust and governance is examined. It will be argued that the effects on these two elements do not justify the adoption of distributed consensus systems satisfactorily. Against this backdrop, it will be held that blockchains and similar technologies are being adopted because they are regarded as having a valid claim to authority as specified by Max Weber, i.e., herrschaft. Consequently, it will be discussed whether current implementations fall – and to what extent – within the legitimate types of traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal authority. The conclusion is that the conceptualization developed by Weber does not capture the core ideas that appear to establish the belief in the legitimacy of distributed consensus systems. Therefore, this dissertation describes the herrschaft of systems such as blockchains by conceptualizing a computational extension of the pure type of rational-legal authority, qualified as algorithmic authority. The foundational elements of algorithmic authority are then discussed. Particular attention is focused on the idea of normativity cultivated in systems of algorithmic rules as well as the concept of decentralization. Practical suggestions conclude the following dissertation

    Quest for Good Money

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    This open access book examines the history and role of money. Money is often defined in terms of three interrelated functions: as a medium of exchange, store of value and unit of account. Researchers frequently discuss the first two functions, but tend to ignore unit of account. This book focuses on how a unit of account or denomination can be defined and can be derived from the monetary system. In the case of paper money and coins, we know how to determine the denomination of money based on the problem of the least number of weights defined by Bâchet and proved by Hardy and Wright (1960). However, in the case of digital or cryptocurrency, denomination may not matter because digital or cryptocurrency uses a wallet that is essentially denomination free: a wallet can contain any amount of currency without upper and lower limits. When people talk about the stablecoin, i.e. the stable price of digital and cryptocurrency with the major legal tender, they take a unit of account or denomination of digital or cryptocurrency as given. This arrangement destroys the nature of denomination free or decentralized autonomy as it were. Exploring how we can consolidate with these two views of denomination, this book will appeal to anyone interested in creating new digital or cryptocurrencies. It also serves as a textbook on central bank digital currency

    Quest for Good Money

    Get PDF
    This open access book examines the history and role of money. Money is often defined in terms of three interrelated functions: as a medium of exchange, store of value and unit of account. Researchers frequently discuss the first two functions, but tend to ignore unit of account. This book focuses on how a unit of account or denomination can be defined and can be derived from the monetary system. In the case of paper money and coins, we know how to determine the denomination of money based on the problem of the least number of weights defined by Bâchet and proved by Hardy and Wright (1960). However, in the case of digital or cryptocurrency, denomination may not matter because digital or cryptocurrency uses a wallet that is essentially denomination free: a wallet can contain any amount of currency without upper and lower limits. When people talk about the stablecoin, i.e. the stable price of digital and cryptocurrency with the major legal tender, they take a unit of account or denomination of digital or cryptocurrency as given. This arrangement destroys the nature of denomination free or decentralized autonomy as it were. Exploring how we can consolidate with these two views of denomination, this book will appeal to anyone interested in creating new digital or cryptocurrencies. It also serves as a textbook on central bank digital currency

    Regulatory constraints on public sector innovation: a new comparative approach

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    Innovation is essential to the continual improvement of public sector services. Research on public sector innovation is important due to the size, scope, and complexity of public sector service delivery. The underlying assumption of the public sector innovation literature is that the public sector suffers from a lack of innovation. The standard explanation tends to focus on the management and culture that is typical of public sector bodies. From that basis, scholars have sought to foster public sector innovation by proposing the adoption of practices from the more innovative private sector. The impact of regulation on public sector innovation remains unclear within the existing theoretical framework, and that relationship has not been systematically examined. The lack of attention given to legislative and regulatory structures within public sector innovation research is a significant omission because any provision of public sector services is a deliberative decision by government guided by the political process rather than the market. This thesis makes a significant contribution to the economics of public sector innovation, developing a theoretical approach based on new comparative economics and evolutionary economics to examine regulatory constraints on public sector services, furthered by insight gained from case studies and legislative analysis of government schools, independent public schools, charter schools, and voucher programs. This thesis develops two central claims. First, in any area of public sector service provision, a diversity of institutional possibilities for service delivery can be observed. This thesis draws on the new comparative economics framework (Djankov et. al 2003; Shleifer 2005) and extends its theoretical application to a public sector context. Second, each institutional possibility - embedded in its own legislative and regulatory frameworks - will have distinct constraints of the dynamism of how public sector services are first adopted, transformed, and ultimately come to an end. As this suggests, it is possible to identify mechanisms of creation and destruction by examining legislative and regulatory provisions. This approach draws on evolutionary economics and the Schumpeterian conceptualization of innovation as a dynamic process known as "creative destruction" (Schumpeter 1942) and uses this insight a conceptual lens for legislative and regulatory analysis. Public school education provides an exemplar for examining legislative and regulatory frameworks governing public sector service delivery. There is no single method of the provision of school education. Instead, as this thesis shows, there is a spectrum of institutional forms that have emerged which seek to fulfill the aims of the public provision of school education. The institutional theory of regulation, drawn from new comparative economics, posits that society faces a trade-off between the perceived costs of private disorder and the perceived costs of government dictatorship. Institutional possibilities emerge to economize these competing risks. This thesis employs the Institutional Possibilities Frontier, associated with new comparative economics, as a tool to compare and contrast four examples of institutional possibilities - government schools and Independent Public Schools in Australia, and the American school choice programs of charter schools and voucher programs. The new comparative approach to public sector innovation characterizes regulatory constraints as costs of dictatorship. In the school education service delivery context, the centralized regulation of public services - expressed in legislation and regulatory frameworks - attempts to control various perceived risks of disorder, including problems of duplication, positive externalities, information asymmetries, parental failure, and societal dysfunction. However, amongst other costs, the consequence of centralized control of service delivery is that local autonomy, professional discretion, and dynamism, in how schools are established and closed, are necessarily constrained. The new comparative approach predicts that decentralized institutional arrangements will be more favorable to innovation as compared to centralized institutional possibilities, as more dynamic and evolutionary mechanisms of creation and destruction will be embedded in the legislative and regulatory framework governing service delivery. This thesis provides empirical support for this theoretical prediction - demonstrating that there is a correlation between regulatory structures and dynamism in a public sector context and affirming the new comparative approach's explanatory power. This thesis makes four contributions. First, the new comparative approach to public sector innovation that is developed provides a novel theoretical explanation for the lack of public sector innovation framed around regulatory constraints. Second, a unique method of analyzing regulatory constraints is advanced, which contributes to the literatures of new comparative economics, evolutionary economics, and public sector innovation, in conversation with the literature of school choice and school autonomy. Third, several empirical findings are presented through case studies and legislative analysis of public school education in the government, independent public school, charter school, and voucher program institutional contexts. Fourth, a number of insights are offered towards developing evolutionary public policy and greater dynamism in public sector service provision. Together, these contributions open up new avenues for research and chart a new agenda for public sector innovation based on regulatory and comparative institutional analysis
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