Scholars have studied international NGOs as advocates and service providers, but have neglected their importance in autonomously enforcing international law. We have two basic aims: first to establish the nature and significance of transnational NGO enforcement, and second to explore the factors behind its rise. NGO enforcement comprises a spectrum of practices, from indirect (e.g., monitoring and investigation), to direct enforcement (e.g., prosecution and interdiction). We explain NGO enforcement by an increased demand for the enforcement of international law, and factors that have lowered the cost of supply for non-state enforcement. Increased demand for enforcement reflects the growing gap between the increased legalization of internati...
The recent global proliferation of domestic anti-corruption laws intended to have extraterritorial a...
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) play a vital role in international law and governance by influ...
What happens after an international court finds a state has violated international law? Many realize...
This thesis examines the prolific increase of non-government organisations (NGOs) and their involvem...
Despite growing environmental awareness and the efforts of a variety of Non-Governmental Organisatio...
The European Union is increasingly resorting to a decentralised enforcement strategy in which it rel...
The global upsurge of interest in corruption has led to the proliferation of anti-corruption instrum...
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), also variously known as interest groups, nonprofits, pressure...
More than 50 countries around the world have sharply increased legal restrictions on both domestic n...
Within the current accepted paradigm of the international legal system, states are the only entities...
The increasing role that NGOs play at different levels of legal relevance – from treaty-making to ru...
This paper examines through qualitative study the effect of government regulatory restriction and re...
For centuries, international diplomacy was predominantly an affair of states. Neither private actors...
Empirically recent global developments have shown that transnational NGOs operate in between civic m...
Gareth Evans examines how non-state actors are increasingly of more importance in the prevention and...
The recent global proliferation of domestic anti-corruption laws intended to have extraterritorial a...
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) play a vital role in international law and governance by influ...
What happens after an international court finds a state has violated international law? Many realize...
This thesis examines the prolific increase of non-government organisations (NGOs) and their involvem...
Despite growing environmental awareness and the efforts of a variety of Non-Governmental Organisatio...
The European Union is increasingly resorting to a decentralised enforcement strategy in which it rel...
The global upsurge of interest in corruption has led to the proliferation of anti-corruption instrum...
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), also variously known as interest groups, nonprofits, pressure...
More than 50 countries around the world have sharply increased legal restrictions on both domestic n...
Within the current accepted paradigm of the international legal system, states are the only entities...
The increasing role that NGOs play at different levels of legal relevance – from treaty-making to ru...
This paper examines through qualitative study the effect of government regulatory restriction and re...
For centuries, international diplomacy was predominantly an affair of states. Neither private actors...
Empirically recent global developments have shown that transnational NGOs operate in between civic m...
Gareth Evans examines how non-state actors are increasingly of more importance in the prevention and...
The recent global proliferation of domestic anti-corruption laws intended to have extraterritorial a...
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) play a vital role in international law and governance by influ...
What happens after an international court finds a state has violated international law? Many realize...