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Consumer law and structures of thought: A comment
Authors:Iain Ramsay
Affiliation:(1) Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, 4700 Keele Street, M3J 1P3 North York, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Conclusion Consumer law seems to be a particularly post-modern form of law. It is pluralistic, its boundaries are more a matter of academic fiat than representing natural borders, it is neither obviously a prop for thestatus quo nor an instrument of social transformation, and it is, as Bourgoignie (1991) argues, resistant to grand narratives. It does not fit neatly into traditional visions of class politics but does raise questions of class, gender, and race (see further Ramsay, 1991b). Recent theoretical work has shown greater introspection concerning the assumptions and nature of consumer law and the competing political visions of consumer protection embedded in consumer law and protection. It is important that this theoretical dialogue continue as consumerism, consumer protection, and consumer law migrate to countries of the South and Eastern Europe. If, as Frances Fukuyama (1992) argues, the consumer society is ldquothe end of history,rdquo then it suggests that research on the consumer society as a cultural, economic, political, and social form and the role of ldquolawrdquo in this society is an important theoretical problematic.The author would like to thank Reuben Hasson, Norbert Reich, David Vaver, and Toni Williams for comments on an earlier draft.
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