The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
Signalling Intentions and Obliging Behavior Online: An Application of Semiotic and Legal Modeling in E-Commerce
|
|
Author(s): James Backhouse (London School of Economics, UK)and Edward K. Cheng (Harvard Law School, USA)
Copyright: 2002
Pages: 21
Source title:
Strategies for eCommerce Success
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Bijan Fazlollahi (Georgia State University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-931777-08-7.ch005
Purchase
|
Abstract
Electronic commerce has the potential to deliver goods and services to customers more quickly, cheaply, and conveniently than ever before. But before performance the obligations have to be created. This paper explores the semiotic and legal aspects of online contracts. It reviews speech act theory from philosophers such as Austin and Searle to explain how words and actions can create legal obligations. It then examines English contract law and its requirements to find an abstract basis upon which contract creation can be modeled. Using semiotics and law, the paper thereafter creates a model of the contract creation process and applies it to electronic commerce in intangible goods. Since electronic commerce is so pervasive and extends beyond any particular jurisdiction, the need is destined to increase for high-level abstraction and for a model for comparison and cross reference.
Related Content
|
Imen Hilali, Jamel Eddine Gharbi.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
Thouraya Othman Hmidi.
© 2026.
18 pages.
|
|
Rupa Rathee, Monika Singh, Inderjeet Maurya.
© 2026.
24 pages.
|
|
Sihem ben Saad.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
Hemant Gupta, Swarnava Sengupta, Mrinmoy Bhattacharjee, Sugandha Gajanan Ghadi.
© 2026.
16 pages.
|
|
Deepali Nilesh Pulekar, Pritesh Pradeep Somani, Vishwanathan Hariharan Iyer, Prachi Wani, Chinmoy Goswami.
© 2026.
36 pages.
|
|
A. S. Anurag, M. Johnpaul.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
|