Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of Law, speaks about constitutional pluralism in a global context. He explores the insights constitutional pluralism brings to transnational law, why it\u27s particularly pertinent to the European Union, and the extent to which these insights might translate to the global stage. Respondent: Peer Zumbansen, Osgoode Hall Law School
What is constitutional pluralism? What does it stand for? What does it expect to achieve, or change ...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
This lecture sets out to demystify the topic of legal pluralism by examining the relationship betwee...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
Neil Walker, one of the foremost constitutional theorists of our time, is perhaps best known for his...
Neil Walker, one of the foremost constitutional theorists of our time, is perhaps best known for his...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
Peer Zumbansen, Osgoode Hall Law School, draws out the analogies and connections between long-standi...
We live in a world of legal pluralism, where a single act or actor is potentially regulated by multi...
Some challenges of legal globalization closely resemble those formulated earlier for legal pluralism...
Over the past few decades, the complex process of globalization have dissolved the traditional conce...
Constitutional pluralism has become immensely popular among scholars who study European integration ...
As a scholarly project, global legal pluralism has been extraordinarily successful, and it is not di...
Pluralism has made its way into European law literature already a long time ago. Some of its main ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
What is constitutional pluralism? What does it stand for? What does it expect to achieve, or change ...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
This lecture sets out to demystify the topic of legal pluralism by examining the relationship betwee...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
Neil Walker, one of the foremost constitutional theorists of our time, is perhaps best known for his...
Neil Walker, one of the foremost constitutional theorists of our time, is perhaps best known for his...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
Peer Zumbansen, Osgoode Hall Law School, draws out the analogies and connections between long-standi...
We live in a world of legal pluralism, where a single act or actor is potentially regulated by multi...
Some challenges of legal globalization closely resemble those formulated earlier for legal pluralism...
Over the past few decades, the complex process of globalization have dissolved the traditional conce...
Constitutional pluralism has become immensely popular among scholars who study European integration ...
As a scholarly project, global legal pluralism has been extraordinarily successful, and it is not di...
Pluralism has made its way into European law literature already a long time ago. Some of its main ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
What is constitutional pluralism? What does it stand for? What does it expect to achieve, or change ...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
This lecture sets out to demystify the topic of legal pluralism by examining the relationship betwee...