Creating markets in no-trust environments: The law and economics of smart contracts |
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Authors: | Helen Eenmaa-Dimitrieva Maria José Schmidt-Kessen |
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Affiliation: | 1. JSD Yale Law School, Postdoctoral Researcher in Information Technology Law, Founder of the Research and Study Programme in Information Technology Law, School of Law, University of Tartu, Näituse 20, Tartu 50409 Estonia;2. PhD European University Institute, Postdoctoral Researcher and Teaching Associate at Queen Mary University London, Centre for Commercial Law Studies, 67-69 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3JB, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Smart contracts, self-executing agreements based on blockchain technology, have the capacity to create trust in what we term no-trust contracting environments. We argue that using them in such environments is the path to unleash the full potential of smart contracts. Compared to the contract enforcement mechanisms characterized by traditional contract law or relational contracts, smart contracts can offer a superior solution for facilitating trade.Several lawyers and economists have debated whether smart contracts might offer the prospect of cheaper, faster and better transactions. As we discuss below, contract law scholars caution that they neither replicate the relational context essential for the day-to-day practice of contracting nor offer a superior solution to problems addressed by traditional contract law, such as contract validity and legality. We clarify and systematize the current thinking on the legal nature and reliability of smart contracts, and address the concerns of contract law scholars. While doing that, we suggest a step forward in characterizing contracting environments, contract enforcement mechanisms and the trust relationship underlying contracts. |
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Keywords: | Primary: law and economics Contract law Smart contracts Enforcement Trust Secondary: efficient breach Relational contracts Blockchain Trustless trust No-trust |
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