Future Finance

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This chapter engages with future finance from a perspective of financial production and practices, which link social systems across scale. Finance has undergone several transformational shifts, thereby deeply affecting these links with other social systems that define their functioning, their organisation and governance. Importantly, future finance stands at multiple crossroads, confronted with a range of vast, far-reaching challenges, including geopolitical shifts, technology induced changes, and strong sustainability imperatives. Not least, all this begs the question to what degree finance as an increasingly self-serving industry can be redesigned to the benefit of the wider public by creating public wealth more broadly. This chapter sets some overall parameters, including changing law and legal practice as pivotal, yet largely neglected, ordering and governance mechanisms, and it provides cursory evidence for their importance. It thereby suggests new directions for geographical research in the framework of a practice-oriented, forensic-like research programme that links the societally and economically transformative processes of financialization with altered production modes of finance, thereby stressing the importance of both law and legal practice, and geography.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationContemporary Economic Geographies: Inspiring, Critical and Plural Perspectives
EditorsJennifer Johns, Sarah Marie Hall
Place of PublicationBristol
PublisherBristol University Press
Chapter26
Pages338-351
Edition1
ISBN (Print)978-1529220568
Publication statusPublished - 12 Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

The subdiscipline of economic geography has a long and varied history, and recent work has pushed the field to diversify even further. This collection takes this agenda forward by showcasing inspiring, critical and plural perspectives for contemporary economic geographies.
Highlighting the contributions of global scholars, the thirty chapters showcase fresh ways of approaching economic geography in research, teaching and praxis. With sections on thought leaders, contemporary critical debates and future research agendas, this collection calls for greater openness and inclusivity.

Keywords

  • financial geographies
  • financial assets
  • law and legal practices
  • sustainable finance
  • financialisation
  • social systems
  • banking industry

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