“Where an excess of power prevails, property of no sort is duly respected. No man is safe in his opinions, his person, his faculties or his possessions. ”
― James Madison
“Liberty, once lost, is lost forever.” – John Adams
In her thought-leadership, Allyson Cavaretta has consistently helped influence the intersection of business, law, politics, and policy. Through a series of Insights, she has shared her thoughts on designing an international standard to better ensure that the principles of liberty and justice are embedded in a global digital economy. Her work pushes the edges and explores the legal and political infection points facing us in the 21st century.
- Justice, Development, and the Global Economy – An Introduction
- Defining Our Terms in Justice, Development, and the Global Economy
- Social and Historical Context to Individual Security
- An Historical Analog of Social Contract Disruption: Gilded Age of 1880-1918
- Similarities in Modern Innovations Undermining Today’s Social Contracts
- Realigning Social Contracts to Address Trade in Identity
- Protecting Selective Privacy Globally Through an Equitable Network Standard
- Challenges to Creating an Equitable Network Standard
- Where Metrics Defining an Equitable Network Standard Could Emerge
- Conclusion – Fulfilling Justice in the Global Economy


