Legal affordances in global wealth chains: How platform firms use legal and spatial scaling
Maj Grasten,
Leonard Seabrooke and
Duncan Wigan
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Maj Grasten: 4300Copenhagen Business School
Duncan Wigan: 4300Copenhagen Business School
Environment and Planning A, 2023, vol. 55, issue 4, 1062-1079
Abstract:
Firms can use legal and spatial scaling to increase their control and capacity to exploit assets. Here we examine how platform firms, like AirBnB, Uber, and Bird, scale their operations through global wealth chains. Their use of law is to maximize wealth creation and protection, while their services use local spaces to extract value from established property, labor, and public thoroughfares. We examine how such ‘networked accumulation’ platform firms use legal and spatial scaling through legal affordances. This includes opportunities for absences, ambiguities and arbitrage that are realized via multi and inter-scalar strategies and produce variegation. Our analysis draws on legal documents, as well as interviews, from Barcelona and San Francisco. The article contributes with a model of how platform firms use legal and spatial scaling, as well as how activists can challenge their operations.
Keywords: platform firms; global wealth chains; uber; AirBnB; labor; housing; public thoroughfares; social activism (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:envira:v:55:y:2023:i:4:p:1062-1079
DOI: 10.1177/0308518X211057131
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