International economic law (IEL) continues to evolve through dialectic processes of unilateral, bilateral, regional and worldwide regulation. The human rights obligations of all UN member states call for ‘normative individualism’ in economic regulation and justify ‘fragmentation’ of state-centred treaties so as to protect human rights and international public goods more effectively for the benefit of citizens. The ‘structural biases’ and often indeterminate rules and principles in competing treaty regimes for multilevel governance of interdependent public goods require protecting transnational rule of law for the benefit of citizens based on ‘consistent interpretations’, ‘judicial comity’ and ‘cosmopolitan re-interpretations’ of IEL so as t...
This short comment on the preceding article by Prof. Schneiderman calls for the clarification of leg...
This article, accepted for publication in the 2012 Polish Yearbook of International Law, argues that...
The fragmentation of the international legal system is not new. The consent-based nature of internat...
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 customary law requires interpreting treaties and settling related disputes ‘in conform...
... Just as founding European economic law "on the principles of liberty, democracy, respect for hum...
The UN Charter and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties require interpreting treaties and s...
International economic law (IEL) developed since ancient times based on private and public, national...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
Law and governance need to be justified vis-à-vis citizens in order to be accepted as legitimate and...
(Published version of Working Paper EUI LAW 2012/17)Most worldwide monetary, financial, trade and en...
This contribution is based on my lecture at the SIDI XVI annual meeting of the Italian Society of In...
Since the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1922, governments have co...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
This short comment on the preceding article by Prof. Schneiderman calls for the clarification of leg...
This article, accepted for publication in the 2012 Polish Yearbook of International Law, argues that...
The fragmentation of the international legal system is not new. The consent-based nature of internat...
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 customary law requires interpreting treaties and settling related disputes ‘in conform...
... Just as founding European economic law "on the principles of liberty, democracy, respect for hum...
The UN Charter and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties require interpreting treaties and s...
International economic law (IEL) developed since ancient times based on private and public, national...
The state-centred 'Westphalian model' of international law has failed to protect human rights and ot...
Law and governance need to be justified vis-à-vis citizens in order to be accepted as legitimate and...
(Published version of Working Paper EUI LAW 2012/17)Most worldwide monetary, financial, trade and en...
This contribution is based on my lecture at the SIDI XVI annual meeting of the Italian Society of In...
Since the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1922, governments have co...
This final chapter draws conclusions from the second edition of Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade ...
This short comment on the preceding article by Prof. Schneiderman calls for the clarification of leg...
This article, accepted for publication in the 2012 Polish Yearbook of International Law, argues that...
The fragmentation of the international legal system is not new. The consent-based nature of internat...