This contribution discusses legal and methodological problems of multilevel governance of the international trading, development, environmental and legal systems from the perspective of “public goods theories” and related legal theories. The state-centred, power-oriented governance practices in worldwide organizations fail to protect effectively human rights, transnational rule of law and other international public goods for the benefit of citizens. Their criticism by civil society, democratic parliaments and courts of justice prompts increasing opposition to non-inclusive, intergovernmental rule-making, as in the case of the 2011 Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement rejected by the European Parliament. The “democracy deficits” and morally o...
This contribution argues that the perennial negotiations on adjustments of the law of the WTO (e. g....
Since the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1922, governments have co...
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2021Legal history confirms that general interests ...
This publication includes papers of an interdisciplinary conference in 2011 analysing multilevel gov...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
Is ineffective protection of international public goods, and thereby also of interrelated national p...
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of transnational economic governance struc...
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of transnational economic governance struc...
This symposium summarizes the main conclusions of an interdisciplinary conference on Multilevel Gove...
Law and governance need to be justified vis-à-vis citizens in order to be accepted as legitimate and...
Is the ineffective protection of international public goods (like an efficient world trading and fin...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
Globalization transforms most national into transnational public goods (PGs), which no state can pro...
This lecture, delivered at Copenhagen Business School on 18 November 2011, examines the legal and co...
Parts I and II discuss five competing “narratives” of international economic law (IEL) as (1) power-...
This contribution argues that the perennial negotiations on adjustments of the law of the WTO (e. g....
Since the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1922, governments have co...
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2021Legal history confirms that general interests ...
This publication includes papers of an interdisciplinary conference in 2011 analysing multilevel gov...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
Is ineffective protection of international public goods, and thereby also of interrelated national p...
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of transnational economic governance struc...
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of transnational economic governance struc...
This symposium summarizes the main conclusions of an interdisciplinary conference on Multilevel Gove...
Law and governance need to be justified vis-à-vis citizens in order to be accepted as legitimate and...
Is the ineffective protection of international public goods (like an efficient world trading and fin...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
Globalization transforms most national into transnational public goods (PGs), which no state can pro...
This lecture, delivered at Copenhagen Business School on 18 November 2011, examines the legal and co...
Parts I and II discuss five competing “narratives” of international economic law (IEL) as (1) power-...
This contribution argues that the perennial negotiations on adjustments of the law of the WTO (e. g....
Since the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1922, governments have co...
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2021Legal history confirms that general interests ...