This article addresses concerns that the growth in global governance may be bringing with it a decline in the significance of democratic sources of political legitimacy. One approach in evaluating such concerns is to ask whether the respective patterns of legitimation for private and public authority differ or whether they refer to a similar set of normative standards. Private transnational governance regimes provide useful contexts in which to assess the presumed democratic erosion. They seem, almost of themselves, to make the case for such a decline: in them regulatory authority is exercised by non-state actors who, by their very nature, lack the kind of authorization afforded by the democratic procedures that legitimize state-based regul...
Scholars have controversially discussed whether the rise of transnational private authority is benef...
During the past few years, the european union (eu) has made increasing use of the so-called soft mod...
The paper argues that the current global market is organized by a system of transnational law whose ...
This article addresses concerns that the growth in global governance may be bringing with it a decli...
In this article we investigate the institutional mechanisms required for ‘liquid’ forms of authority...
The emergence of non-state actors as regulators is a key feature of contemporary transnational regul...
This thematic issue brings together research from political science and legal history about legitima...
© 2017 Dr. Lloyd Douglas FreeburnThis thesis challenges the conventional conception of the private l...
Transnational private regulation (TPR) is a key aspect of contemporary governance. At first glance T...
Nowadays the ongoing global crisis has triggered an issue how to set up a theoretical framework of g...
This article presents a discourse approach to the study of legitimacy of governance beyond the democ...
What explains the reversal of transnational private rule-making authority? Embedding constructivist ...
Transnational non-state governance supplies a growing proportion of the rules and regulations that g...
This Article argues, from the standpoint of democratic legitimacy, that supranational institutions a...
The role of economic actors and transnational corporations in transforming the world’s political and...
Scholars have controversially discussed whether the rise of transnational private authority is benef...
During the past few years, the european union (eu) has made increasing use of the so-called soft mod...
The paper argues that the current global market is organized by a system of transnational law whose ...
This article addresses concerns that the growth in global governance may be bringing with it a decli...
In this article we investigate the institutional mechanisms required for ‘liquid’ forms of authority...
The emergence of non-state actors as regulators is a key feature of contemporary transnational regul...
This thematic issue brings together research from political science and legal history about legitima...
© 2017 Dr. Lloyd Douglas FreeburnThis thesis challenges the conventional conception of the private l...
Transnational private regulation (TPR) is a key aspect of contemporary governance. At first glance T...
Nowadays the ongoing global crisis has triggered an issue how to set up a theoretical framework of g...
This article presents a discourse approach to the study of legitimacy of governance beyond the democ...
What explains the reversal of transnational private rule-making authority? Embedding constructivist ...
Transnational non-state governance supplies a growing proportion of the rules and regulations that g...
This Article argues, from the standpoint of democratic legitimacy, that supranational institutions a...
The role of economic actors and transnational corporations in transforming the world’s political and...
Scholars have controversially discussed whether the rise of transnational private authority is benef...
During the past few years, the european union (eu) has made increasing use of the so-called soft mod...
The paper argues that the current global market is organized by a system of transnational law whose ...