Vidéo – Conférence « The Code of Capital » de Prof. Katharina Pistor

Vous trouverez ci-dessus la conférence « The Code of Capital » de la Prof. Katharina Pistor (Columbia University) dans le cadre du cycle de conférences 2023-2024 « Origins and Structures of Global Economic Governance »

 
Biographie de la conférencière

Katharina Pistor is the Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law at Columbia Law School and director of the Law School’s Center on Global Legal Transformation. Her research and teaching spans corporate law, corporate governance, money and finance, property rights, comparative law, and law and development. She is the co-recipient of the Max Planck Research Award (2012), and a member of the Berlin-Brandenburg and the European Academies of Science. He latest book is “The Code of Capital: How the Law Creates Wealth and Inequality” (Princeton, 2019).

 

Description sommaire

Capital is the defining feature of modern economies, yet most people have no idea where it actually comes from. What is it, exactly, that transforms mere wealth into an asset that automatically creates more wealth? The Code of Capital explains how capital is created behind closed doors in the offices of private attorneys, and why this little-known fact is one of the biggest reasons for the widening wealth gap between the holders of capital and everybody else. The book suggests that the law selectively “codes” certain assets, endowing them with the capacity to protect and produce private wealth. With the right legal coding, any object, claim, or idea can be turned into capital—and lawyers are the keepers of the code. It describes how they pick and choose among different legal systems and legal devices for the ones that best serve their clients’ needs, and how techniques that were first perfected centuries ago to code landholdings as capital are being used today to code stocks, bonds, ideas, and even expectations—assets that exist only in law.