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Oxford
Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20, Issue 3, pp. 317-351: Abstract.
Contractual
Governance: Institutional and Organizational Analysis
PETER
VINCENT-JONES
Lancashire
Law School, University of Central Lancashire
This
paper focuses on the role of contract as a governance mechanism in contemporary
economic and social relations, exploring this theme in the context of recent
writing on contract and contracting within law and other disciplines. The
trends towards both outsourcing by private firms and privatization of public
services have increased the importance of contract as an instrument of market
and quasi-market exchange. Such organizational developments have been
accompanied by institutional changes in the way in which business relationships
are regulated through legal and extralegal norms and other constraints in the
contractual environment. Contract is also being deployed increasingly as an
instrument of regulation of social relations between the state and citizens in
the fields of welfare, education and criminal justice. Following Macneil, the
paper develops a methodology for assessing the quality of different types of
relationship-between buyers and sellers, purchasers and providers, providers
and consumers, regulators and regulatees, government and governed, and state
agencies and citizens-according to the relationality of «contract»
norms. Drawing on theories of responsive regulation, the paper explores the
institutional and organizational conditions of responsive contractual
governance in selected areas of market, quasi-market, and social relations. The
underlying argument is that the core values of democracy, participation, and
citizenship have a central part to play in the determination of responsive
regulatory policy. We should aim to increase the level of public participation
in decisions concerning organizational and institutional frameworks, so that
citizen and consumer interests may adequately be represented in the
determination of optimal forms of governance.