Part of the continuing allure of Philip Jessup’s account of transnational law, published in 1956, lies in its promise of capturing something beyond the easily visible bodies of public and private international law. Attempts to name and to frame this unseen law continue to this day. This chapter, part of a collection commemorating the 60th anniversary of the publication of Transnational Law, examines the intellectual holding pen created by Jessup for other rules and sources of law, his “larger storehouse of rules”. While this initiative was firmly aimed at expanding the view of law to see beyond the state and to center practice in its vision field, the tools and methods for studying and understanding law in this way remain unclear. Emerging...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation ha...
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
I think it is safe to say that no other body of law has changed as much during the Twentieth Century...
Part of the continuing allure of Philip Jessup’s account of transnational law, published in 1956, li...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation ha...
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
I think it is safe to say that no other body of law has changed as much during the Twentieth Century...
Part of the continuing allure of Philip Jessup’s account of transnational law, published in 1956, li...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation ha...
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
I think it is safe to say that no other body of law has changed as much during the Twentieth Century...