美国法律框架:产品长寿之路?

P. White, A. Fellmeth, Dallin Robinson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

世界上许多地区都在探索采取法律行动来延长产品寿命并减少对环境的破坏。然而,很少有研究关注现行法律制度如何影响美国市场上的产品寿命和产品维修。我们的研究回顾了联邦层面的法规和标准网络,并从50个州中选取了一些法律,指出了美国法律体系的独特品质。文献暗示了人们长期以来对计划报废的接受,以及将其作为一种有利可图的商业实践的理由。我们回顾了美国商业中完善的产品保证的范围,注意到实质性的限制以及它们未开发的潜力,以支持更长的产品寿命。为在美国市场销售消费品的公司提供咨询服务的律师接受了调查,调查结果证实了几个初步发现。虽然客户公司都出售了一些带有明示保证的产品,但大多数产品依赖于隐含保证,受访者一致认为强制性法规将最有效地激励他们的公司开发和销售寿命更长、维修能力更强的产品。我们建议一个产品寿命的途径-强制所有硬制品的标签,准确估计平均产品寿命和维修能力。如果结构合理,该框架可以推动行业、政府和产品所有者都接受我们使用的材料和产品的更多义务,同时刺激基于产品可修复性和寿命的竞争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
US Legal Frameworks: A Path to Product Longevity?
Legal actions to increase product lifespans and reduce environmental damage have been explored for many regions around the world. However, little research has focused on the ways that the extant legal system affects product lifespans and product repair in the US market. Our research reviewed the network of statutes and standards on the Federal level and sampled laws from some of the fifty States, noting unique qualities of the US legal system. Literature implied the longstanding acceptance of planned obsolescence and its justification as a profitable business practice. We reviewed the scope of the well-established product warranties in US commerce, noting substantive limitations as well as their untapped potential to support of longer product lifespans. Lawyers who counsel firms that sell consumer products in the US market were surveyed, and the survey results corroborated several initial findings. While the client firms all sold some products with express warranties, most of their products relied on implied warranties, and the respondents unanimously agreed that mandatory regulations would most effectively motivate their firms to develop and sell products with longer lifespans and greater capacity for repair. We suggest a path to product longevity—mandating the labeling of all hardgoods with accurate estimates of average product lifespan and capacity to be repaired. If properly structured, the framework could push industry, government, and product owners to all accept more obligation for the materials and products that we use, while stimulating competition based on product repairability and longevity.
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