The international legal order, although pluralist in structure, is in the process of being constitutionalized. This article supports this claim in several different ways. In the Part I, I argue that most accepted understandings of “constitution” would readily apply to at least some international regimes. In Part II, I discuss different notions of “constitutional pluralism,” and demonstrate that legal pluralism is not necessarily antithetical to constitutionalism. In fact, one finds a great deal of constitutional pluralism within national legal orders in Europe. Part III puts forward an argument that the European Court of Justice, the European Court of Human Rights, and the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization are constitutional ju...
Global Legal Pluralism recognizes the inevitability (and sometimes even the desirability) of multipl...
Nico Krisch’s new book, Beyond Constitutionalism: The Pluralist Structure of Post-National Law (BC),...
In this brief Essay, then, I wish to engage in a thought experiment by looking at both federalism an...
The international legal order, although pluralist in structure, is in the process of being constitut...
Constitutions are often seen as creating a closed and hierarchically organized system of law. Consti...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
Over the past few decades, the complex process of globalization have dissolved the traditional conce...
In the debates about whether to take constitutionalism beyond the state, the European Union invariab...
The idea that constitutionalism is central to the legitimate exercise of public power has dominated ...
Constitutional pluralism has become immensely popular among scholars who study European integration ...
Global constitutionalization is a recent phenomenon that is decisively changing the character of the...
It is clear today that the problems faced by the international community are truly ‘global’ in scale...
Pluralism has made its way into European law literature already a long time ago. Some of its main ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
International law has always been conceived as a project involving sovereign and equal states, who w...
Global Legal Pluralism recognizes the inevitability (and sometimes even the desirability) of multipl...
Nico Krisch’s new book, Beyond Constitutionalism: The Pluralist Structure of Post-National Law (BC),...
In this brief Essay, then, I wish to engage in a thought experiment by looking at both federalism an...
The international legal order, although pluralist in structure, is in the process of being constitut...
Constitutions are often seen as creating a closed and hierarchically organized system of law. Consti...
Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, Edinburgh School of L...
Over the past few decades, the complex process of globalization have dissolved the traditional conce...
In the debates about whether to take constitutionalism beyond the state, the European Union invariab...
The idea that constitutionalism is central to the legitimate exercise of public power has dominated ...
Constitutional pluralism has become immensely popular among scholars who study European integration ...
Global constitutionalization is a recent phenomenon that is decisively changing the character of the...
It is clear today that the problems faced by the international community are truly ‘global’ in scale...
Pluralism has made its way into European law literature already a long time ago. Some of its main ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
International law has always been conceived as a project involving sovereign and equal states, who w...
Global Legal Pluralism recognizes the inevitability (and sometimes even the desirability) of multipl...
Nico Krisch’s new book, Beyond Constitutionalism: The Pluralist Structure of Post-National Law (BC),...
In this brief Essay, then, I wish to engage in a thought experiment by looking at both federalism an...