While it might have been viable for states to isolate themselves from international politics in the nineteenth century, the intensity of economic and social globalisation in the twenty-first century has made this impossible. The contemporary world is an international world - a world of collective security systems and collective trade agreements. What does this mean for the sovereign state and 'its' international legal order? Two alternative approaches to the problem of 'governance' in the era of globalisation have developed in the twentieth century: universal internationalism and regional supranationalism. The first approaches collective action problems from the perspective of the 'sovereign equality' of all States. A second approach to tra...
Since the UN's creation in 1945 a vast nexus of global and regional institutions has evolved, surrou...
In this paper the author analysis the complex process of globalisation and the effect of this proces...
Many argue today that global governance is 'in crisis'. This reflects an undue emphasis on the fate ...
While it might have been viable for states to isolate themselves from international politics in the ...
Global governance is seen as a new mechanism to manage global neighbourhood and to mitigate global p...
The increasing pace of globalisation and resultant global interdependence has renewed debate about t...
Global constitutionalism emerges as a legal response to globalization. By recognizing that globaliza...
The declining significance of national borders constitutes a challenge to the capacity of the nation...
The idea of a single world-scale international system is largely obsolete and far from realistic in ...
Despite the long history of globalizing political relations, world politics can still not be describ...
The global economic and financial crisis of 2007 highlighted the risks, threats and enormous costs o...
The idea of the state lies at the core of international relations and international law, and the con...
Since the UN's creation in 1945 a vast nexus of global and regional institutions has evolved, surrou...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Law.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access is restricted indefi...
Theorising about international relations has a strong intellectual tradition. Theorising about regio...
Since the UN's creation in 1945 a vast nexus of global and regional institutions has evolved, surrou...
In this paper the author analysis the complex process of globalisation and the effect of this proces...
Many argue today that global governance is 'in crisis'. This reflects an undue emphasis on the fate ...
While it might have been viable for states to isolate themselves from international politics in the ...
Global governance is seen as a new mechanism to manage global neighbourhood and to mitigate global p...
The increasing pace of globalisation and resultant global interdependence has renewed debate about t...
Global constitutionalism emerges as a legal response to globalization. By recognizing that globaliza...
The declining significance of national borders constitutes a challenge to the capacity of the nation...
The idea of a single world-scale international system is largely obsolete and far from realistic in ...
Despite the long history of globalizing political relations, world politics can still not be describ...
The global economic and financial crisis of 2007 highlighted the risks, threats and enormous costs o...
The idea of the state lies at the core of international relations and international law, and the con...
Since the UN's creation in 1945 a vast nexus of global and regional institutions has evolved, surrou...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Law.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access is restricted indefi...
Theorising about international relations has a strong intellectual tradition. Theorising about regio...
Since the UN's creation in 1945 a vast nexus of global and regional institutions has evolved, surrou...
In this paper the author analysis the complex process of globalisation and the effect of this proces...
Many argue today that global governance is 'in crisis'. This reflects an undue emphasis on the fate ...