Transnational law is an institutional framework for cross-border interaction beyond the nation state. In distinction of territorially organized national and international law, it is structured as a plurality of functionally specialized transnational law regimes, which in a pragmatic approach combine different governance mechanisms of private (norms, alternative dispute resolution, social sanctions) and public (laws, courts, enforcement) origin, where the latter are dis-embedded from their domestic context. This article explores the concept of transnational law
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
Taking “extraterritoriality,” the traditional touchstone for the state-centered allocation of transn...
The purpose of this article is to identify three understandings of transnational law, all of which h...
Is it important to conceptualize transnational law and “map ” it as a new legal field? This article ...
This article describes transnational private law as a decentralized and intermediate form of transna...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
This chapter provides an overview of the emerging field of transnational constitutional law (TCL). W...
This article categorizes three approaches to theorizing transnational legal ordering that respective...
While some theorize the autonomy of transnational legal orders from nation-state law, we develop the...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
Although the terms transnational law and state transformations are increasingly used, we need cleare...
The paper takes the currently much belabored concepts of “global governance” and “global constitutio...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
Taking “extraterritoriality,” the traditional touchstone for the state-centered allocation of transn...
The purpose of this article is to identify three understandings of transnational law, all of which h...
Is it important to conceptualize transnational law and “map ” it as a new legal field? This article ...
This article describes transnational private law as a decentralized and intermediate form of transna...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
Today, the notion of transnational, or sometimes transsystemic, law has progressed well beyond Jessu...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
This chapter provides an overview of the emerging field of transnational constitutional law (TCL). W...
This article categorizes three approaches to theorizing transnational legal ordering that respective...
While some theorize the autonomy of transnational legal orders from nation-state law, we develop the...
The notion of a transnational law has been under dispute for several decades. After Philip Jessup in...
Although the terms transnational law and state transformations are increasingly used, we need cleare...
The paper takes the currently much belabored concepts of “global governance” and “global constitutio...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
Taking “extraterritoriality,” the traditional touchstone for the state-centered allocation of transn...
The purpose of this article is to identify three understandings of transnational law, all of which h...