Public international law has, in several ways, reached the status of global law. But take care: ‘international’ is not necessarily ‘transnational’ nor is it equal to ‘universal’. In the article, the author draws attention to, 'inter alia', the limits to ‘the consent to be bound’ and to the role of General Principles of international law. Further to that, he discusses aspects of international lawmaking, while underlining that the emphasis should be more on processes of globalization than on global as such: in most cases there is a long way to go
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
Public International Law overshadows what we are accustomed, rightly or wrongly, to term Private Int...
This Article, based on remarks given at a fall 2013 conference hosted by The Whitney R. Harris World...
This article argues that the debate over whether international law can apply to non-state actors mis...
Globalization, characterized by the inter-connectivity of persons, states, and non-state actors on a...
Public international law has been ‘global’ in its application since at least the 1960s, when most we...
The world faces multiple challenges in producing global public goods, such as climate change mitigat...
The article considers the relationship between economic globalisation and the universalisation of le...
The author looks at the broadening of the scope of private international law to meet the realities o...
This article addresses the following question: Is Global Law merely a trendy theory, or are there co...
International law\u27s traditional emphasis on state practice has long been questioned, as scholars ...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
The dominant modern account of the social basis of international law has been the society of states...
The author explores the effects of globalization on international law. Considering the technological...
In this contribution I attempt to sketch what I mean when I talk about ‘global law’, finishing up wi...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
Public International Law overshadows what we are accustomed, rightly or wrongly, to term Private Int...
This Article, based on remarks given at a fall 2013 conference hosted by The Whitney R. Harris World...
This article argues that the debate over whether international law can apply to non-state actors mis...
Globalization, characterized by the inter-connectivity of persons, states, and non-state actors on a...
Public international law has been ‘global’ in its application since at least the 1960s, when most we...
The world faces multiple challenges in producing global public goods, such as climate change mitigat...
The article considers the relationship between economic globalisation and the universalisation of le...
The author looks at the broadening of the scope of private international law to meet the realities o...
This article addresses the following question: Is Global Law merely a trendy theory, or are there co...
International law\u27s traditional emphasis on state practice has long been questioned, as scholars ...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
The dominant modern account of the social basis of international law has been the society of states...
The author explores the effects of globalization on international law. Considering the technological...
In this contribution I attempt to sketch what I mean when I talk about ‘global law’, finishing up wi...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
Public International Law overshadows what we are accustomed, rightly or wrongly, to term Private Int...
This Article, based on remarks given at a fall 2013 conference hosted by The Whitney R. Harris World...