In the autumn of 2008, at a time of global reconsideration of the role of states in the regulation of markets, the paper uses the reflection on past experiences with the laissez faire state, the interventionist state, the welfare state and the enabling state as institutional crystallization points in an ongoing learning process of regulatory innovation as a framework to assess contemporary proposals to delegate public international law [PIL] enforcement to market actors. As such, the paper attempts to carve out possible conceptual and political implications of the current proposals against the background of interventionist and post-interventionist market regulation models. However, the translation of nation-state experiences with market reg...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
The central objective of this paper is to put the marketization of the state debate into context, ...
The literature on the rise of the regulatory state in Europe has tended to suggest that the regulato...
In the autumn of 2008, at a time of global reconsideration of the role of states in the regulation o...
This paper illuminates the spectrum of international economic regimes through discussion of an under...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
Traditionally, the enforcement of Public International Law (PIL) was a task of states: the addressee...
Traditionally, the enforcement of public international law (PIL) was a task of states: its addressee...
The continuing proliferation of transnational private regulatory governance challenges conceptions o...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
The past few decades have witnessed the growth of an exciting debate in the legal academy about the ...
This chapter demonstrates how the European Union, being understood as a market state, affects the pr...
This chapter demonstrates how the European Union, being understood as a market state, affects the pr...
Transnational Private Regulation (TPR) constitutes a new body of rules, practices and processes, cre...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
The central objective of this paper is to put the marketization of the state debate into context, ...
The literature on the rise of the regulatory state in Europe has tended to suggest that the regulato...
In the autumn of 2008, at a time of global reconsideration of the role of states in the regulation o...
This paper illuminates the spectrum of international economic regimes through discussion of an under...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
Traditionally, the enforcement of Public International Law (PIL) was a task of states: the addressee...
Traditionally, the enforcement of public international law (PIL) was a task of states: its addressee...
The continuing proliferation of transnational private regulatory governance challenges conceptions o...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
There has not been a retreat but a transformation of the state, involving significant changes in bot...
The past few decades have witnessed the growth of an exciting debate in the legal academy about the ...
This chapter demonstrates how the European Union, being understood as a market state, affects the pr...
This chapter demonstrates how the European Union, being understood as a market state, affects the pr...
Transnational Private Regulation (TPR) constitutes a new body of rules, practices and processes, cre...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
The central objective of this paper is to put the marketization of the state debate into context, ...
The literature on the rise of the regulatory state in Europe has tended to suggest that the regulato...