The article connects two strands of the recent sociolegal debate: (1) the empirical discovery of new forms of spontaneous law in die Course of globalization, and (2) the emergence of deconstructive theories of law that undermine the law's hierarchy. The article puts forward the thesis that law's hierarchy has successfully resisted all old and new attempts at its deconstruction; it breaks, however, under the pressures of globalization that produced a global law without the state, as self-created law of global society that has no institutionalized support whatsoever in international poliucs and public international law. Consequently, the article criticizes deconstructive theories for their lack of autological analysis. These theories do not t...
In the current globalization debate the law appears to be entangled in economic and political develo...
This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary Internat...
This essay argues against the two pillars of current research on law and globalisation, from the per...
The article connects two strands of the recent sociolegal debate: (1) the empirical discovery of new...
Modern international law seems to be in disarray. The classic doctrines of international law, with t...
Where do we start when thinking about law and social transformation and how do we articulate and add...
Globalization processes imply the self-deconstruction of the hierarchy of legal norms. Thus, legal p...
This article takes a new approach to legal theory. Because it views law as part of a complex natural...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
The article examines recent theories of legal and constitutional pluralism, especially their adoptio...
Published online before print November 18, 2010This article challenges the optimism common to libera...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
Examining Board: Professor Friedrich V. Kratochwil, formerly EUI/CEU Budapest/Supervisor; Professor ...
Despite the apparent fluidity that characterizes this historical moment as well as this moment in le...
The essay takes a sociological approach to the narrative of progressive legalization -- the globaliz...
In the current globalization debate the law appears to be entangled in economic and political develo...
This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary Internat...
This essay argues against the two pillars of current research on law and globalisation, from the per...
The article connects two strands of the recent sociolegal debate: (1) the empirical discovery of new...
Modern international law seems to be in disarray. The classic doctrines of international law, with t...
Where do we start when thinking about law and social transformation and how do we articulate and add...
Globalization processes imply the self-deconstruction of the hierarchy of legal norms. Thus, legal p...
This article takes a new approach to legal theory. Because it views law as part of a complex natural...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
The article examines recent theories of legal and constitutional pluralism, especially their adoptio...
Published online before print November 18, 2010This article challenges the optimism common to libera...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
Examining Board: Professor Friedrich V. Kratochwil, formerly EUI/CEU Budapest/Supervisor; Professor ...
Despite the apparent fluidity that characterizes this historical moment as well as this moment in le...
The essay takes a sociological approach to the narrative of progressive legalization -- the globaliz...
In the current globalization debate the law appears to be entangled in economic and political develo...
This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary Internat...
This essay argues against the two pillars of current research on law and globalisation, from the per...