Section II discusses six different conceptions of justifying international economic law (IEL). Section III argues that the ‘dual nature’ of modern IEL requires limiting ‘Westphalian conceptions’ of ‘international law among states’ through protection of ‘cosmopolitan rights’ and judicial remedies of citizens in IEL. Section IV explains why past doctrinal disputes among legal positivists, natural law advocates, and social conceptions of law have lost much of their relevance for interpreting IEL. Section V suggests that protecting transnational ‘aggregate public goods' requires constitutional approaches to IEL. Section VI explains the need for comparative institutional research so as to improve the functioning of horizontally and vertically in...
The fairness of institutions of global economic governance ranks among the most pressing issues of o...
The starting question of this chapter is whether International Economic Law (IEL) should also be und...
The UN Charter and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties require interpreting treaties and s...
Parts I and II discuss five competing “narratives” of international economic law (IEL) as (1) power-...
Section I explains why the human rights obligations of all UN Member States call for a new philosoph...
International economic law (IEL) continues to evolve through dialectic processes of unilateral, bila...
Old certainties are melting away. An era has drawn to a close. The foundations of the global economi...
International economic law (IEL) developed since ancient times based on private and public, national...
Is ineffective protection of international public goods, and thereby also of interrelated national p...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
Is the ineffective protection of international public goods (like an efficient world trading and fin...
This short comment on the preceding article by Prof. Schneiderman calls for the clarification of leg...
This book contribution explains why international economic law (IEL) is increasingly taught from div...
International customary law requires interpreting treaties and settling related disputes ‘in conform...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
The fairness of institutions of global economic governance ranks among the most pressing issues of o...
The starting question of this chapter is whether International Economic Law (IEL) should also be und...
The UN Charter and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties require interpreting treaties and s...
Parts I and II discuss five competing “narratives” of international economic law (IEL) as (1) power-...
Section I explains why the human rights obligations of all UN Member States call for a new philosoph...
International economic law (IEL) continues to evolve through dialectic processes of unilateral, bila...
Old certainties are melting away. An era has drawn to a close. The foundations of the global economi...
International economic law (IEL) developed since ancient times based on private and public, national...
Is ineffective protection of international public goods, and thereby also of interrelated national p...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
Is the ineffective protection of international public goods (like an efficient world trading and fin...
This short comment on the preceding article by Prof. Schneiderman calls for the clarification of leg...
This book contribution explains why international economic law (IEL) is increasingly taught from div...
International customary law requires interpreting treaties and settling related disputes ‘in conform...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
The fairness of institutions of global economic governance ranks among the most pressing issues of o...
The starting question of this chapter is whether International Economic Law (IEL) should also be und...
The UN Charter and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties require interpreting treaties and s...