An agreement that enforces itself sounds like magic until it moves real money, real property, or real livelihoods. This book shows how to turn that promise into dependable practice without losing fairness, context, or common sense. You will learn how smart contracts work, where they break, and how to design systems that blend automation with human judgment. It explains the essentials in plain English, from smart contracts and blockchain contracts to contract logic and the realities of legal automation. With lived examples and reusable patterns, it clarifies on-chain governance, decentralized justice, and the operational risks that matter most: risks and bugs, oracles, upgrades, and disputes. The result is a pragmatic toolkit for product leaders, lawyers, founders, and operators who need reliability more than rhetoric. If you are deciding what to automate, how to connect code with evidence, or when to escalate to people, this guide offers mental models you can apply today. It closes with practical roadmaps and metrics to build trust over time, pointing toward the future of trust where code supports clear promises and good process, not a replacement for either. It is for anyone who wants automation to serve people, not the other way around.
Smart Contracts in Action
SKU: 9789374596821
$37.99 Regular Price
$25.32Sale Price
- Omarh Zaydan writes at the intersection of code and institutions, helping readers see how software reshapes rules, incentives, and everyday practice. He has worked alongside product teams and policy thinkers to translate complex systems into clear decisions, focusing on reliability, inclusion, and accountability. Raised between busy port cities and quiet university towns, he appreciates both the frictions of real-world trade and the elegance of formal models. A thread running through his work is the long history of commercial law: from medieval merchant customs to today’s programmable contracts, people have always sought faster, fairer ways to keep promises. Zaydan’s mission is practical: equip builders, lawyers, and operators with patterns that make automation safer and more humane. He values rigorous thinking, plain language, and designs that keep human judgment in the loop.


















