Contract and Power
Ideologies, Inequalities, and Marginalisation in European Contract Law
INTERSENTIA (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 15. January 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
318 pages
978-1-83970-602-8 (ISBN)
Description
This volume investigates how power shapes, distorts, and sometimes defines contractual relationships. Its central aim is to challenge the enduring legal fiction that parties meet as equals, revealing instead how power, be it economic, social, technological, institutional, or interpersonal, permeates negotiation, formation, performance, and enforcement. By uncovering the many ways in which contractual arrangements reflect and reproduce broader patterns of inequality and marginalisation, the book invites readers to rethink contract not as a neutral mechanism of private ordering, but as a field deeply embedded in social structures and political realities.
The authors collectively explore the multifaceted nature of power: how it emerges between individuals, within intimate relationships, across labour markets, and through digital infrastructures and algorithmic systems. Contributors examine bargaining imbalances, undue influence, duress, pay transparency, platform work, consumer vulnerability, technological obsolescence, and the discriminatory effects of automated decision-making. Others interrogate the deeper architecture of private law and show how its doctrines, categories, and organising concepts may obscure power, normalise domination, or shape social identities.
Together, the contributions trace a movement toward a more explicit recognition of unilateral decision-making and a growing body of norms that increasingly resemble a distinct 'law of power'.
The volume is intended for scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and students of contract law, European private law, law and political economy, socio-legal studies, and technology regulation. It will also appeal to readers interested in inequality, social justice, digital governance, and the evolving role of private law in contemporary societies. By placing dynamics of power at the centre of analysis, the book equips its audience with new conceptual tools for understanding how contracts operate in practice and how legal institutions might better respond to the realities of asymmetry that shape everyday transactions.
The authors collectively explore the multifaceted nature of power: how it emerges between individuals, within intimate relationships, across labour markets, and through digital infrastructures and algorithmic systems. Contributors examine bargaining imbalances, undue influence, duress, pay transparency, platform work, consumer vulnerability, technological obsolescence, and the discriminatory effects of automated decision-making. Others interrogate the deeper architecture of private law and show how its doctrines, categories, and organising concepts may obscure power, normalise domination, or shape social identities.
Together, the contributions trace a movement toward a more explicit recognition of unilateral decision-making and a growing body of norms that increasingly resemble a distinct 'law of power'.
The volume is intended for scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and students of contract law, European private law, law and political economy, socio-legal studies, and technology regulation. It will also appeal to readers interested in inequality, social justice, digital governance, and the evolving role of private law in contemporary societies. By placing dynamics of power at the centre of analysis, the book equips its audience with new conceptual tools for understanding how contracts operate in practice and how legal institutions might better respond to the realities of asymmetry that shape everyday transactions.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Intersentia Ltd
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 160 mm
Weight
510 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83970-602-8 (9781839706028)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Technical editor
Associate Professor at University College London.
Professor in Civil Law, Comparative Private Law, and Banking Law at Bocconi University - Dean of Bocconi Law School - President of the Society of European Private Law (SECOLA) - Treasurer of the European Law Institute (ELI).
Content
List of Authors
Introduction - Contract and Power: Ideologies, Inequalities, and Marginalisation in European Contract Law
Chapter 1. - Contract and Power
Chapter 2. - Duress Law and Power
Chapter 3. - Presumed Undue Influence and the Power to Take Advantage in Intimate Relationships
Chapter 4. - Contract and Power in the Age of AI: Algorithmic Discrimination and Fundamental Rights Impact Assessments
Chapter 5. - Technological Power, Planned Obsolescence and Contractual Remedies
Chapter 6. - Contracting with Nature: Empowering Nonhuman Interests in Negotiations
Chapter 7. - No-Contract Law and Power
Chapter 8. - Power in Labour Contract Negotiations: the Restriction of Freedom of Negotiation to Close the Gender Pay Gap
Chapter 9. - European Private Law and Intersectionality: Three Strategies
Chapter 10. - The Stakes of Contract Law. Identities and Distribution in Consumer Contracts and Gender-Related Transactions
Index
Introduction - Contract and Power: Ideologies, Inequalities, and Marginalisation in European Contract Law
Chapter 1. - Contract and Power
Chapter 2. - Duress Law and Power
Chapter 3. - Presumed Undue Influence and the Power to Take Advantage in Intimate Relationships
Chapter 4. - Contract and Power in the Age of AI: Algorithmic Discrimination and Fundamental Rights Impact Assessments
Chapter 5. - Technological Power, Planned Obsolescence and Contractual Remedies
Chapter 6. - Contracting with Nature: Empowering Nonhuman Interests in Negotiations
Chapter 7. - No-Contract Law and Power
Chapter 8. - Power in Labour Contract Negotiations: the Restriction of Freedom of Negotiation to Close the Gender Pay Gap
Chapter 9. - European Private Law and Intersectionality: Three Strategies
Chapter 10. - The Stakes of Contract Law. Identities and Distribution in Consumer Contracts and Gender-Related Transactions
Index