The universality of common moral values as well as common legal principles, giving rise to a step by step development of a basic legal order for all mankind, may very well be considered as a dangerously Euro-centric, presumptuous utopia. However, such a development seems to be the inevitable consequence of what is called globalisation. Therefore, rethinking the relationship between universality and cultural/historical particularity becomes all the more necessary
If the point of constitutionalism is to define the legal framework within which collective self-gove...
This paper forms part of an edited volume on “The Many Constitutions of Europe” (Tuori and Sankari 2...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
The universalism of rights is a corollary to the individualistic semantics of the Enlightment and th...
Problems posed by the existence of many minorities in Europe, whether they be linguistic, ethnic or ...
Der Beitrag erörtert die mögliche Ausrichtung bzw. Regulierung des wachsenden internationalen Handel...
The challenge that the universal faces at the present time does not escape the partiality which is i...
Global Constitutionalism argues that parts of international law can be understood as being grounded ...
This article deals with the universal nature of human rights recognised by all civilisations and leg...
The circulation and entanglements of human beings, data, and goods have not necessarily and by thems...
It is enough to think of the ius commune of tenth-century continental Europe (not to mention the ius...
European integration has been portrayed as an example of the juridification of cosmopolitan values a...
Global, universal, common, are the notions semantically clarified in this chapter. Widely used in co...
L'universalisation constituait à la charnière du XIXe et du XXe siècle un thème de réflexion récurre...
The ‘constitutional failures’ ushering in World Wars I and II and the emergence of post-war ‘multile...
If the point of constitutionalism is to define the legal framework within which collective self-gove...
This paper forms part of an edited volume on “The Many Constitutions of Europe” (Tuori and Sankari 2...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
The universalism of rights is a corollary to the individualistic semantics of the Enlightment and th...
Problems posed by the existence of many minorities in Europe, whether they be linguistic, ethnic or ...
Der Beitrag erörtert die mögliche Ausrichtung bzw. Regulierung des wachsenden internationalen Handel...
The challenge that the universal faces at the present time does not escape the partiality which is i...
Global Constitutionalism argues that parts of international law can be understood as being grounded ...
This article deals with the universal nature of human rights recognised by all civilisations and leg...
The circulation and entanglements of human beings, data, and goods have not necessarily and by thems...
It is enough to think of the ius commune of tenth-century continental Europe (not to mention the ius...
European integration has been portrayed as an example of the juridification of cosmopolitan values a...
Global, universal, common, are the notions semantically clarified in this chapter. Widely used in co...
L'universalisation constituait à la charnière du XIXe et du XXe siècle un thème de réflexion récurre...
The ‘constitutional failures’ ushering in World Wars I and II and the emergence of post-war ‘multile...
If the point of constitutionalism is to define the legal framework within which collective self-gove...
This paper forms part of an edited volume on “The Many Constitutions of Europe” (Tuori and Sankari 2...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...