Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of scholars to investigate into the scope, doctrine, sources and practice of border-crossing legal regulation. This paper reviews much of this preceding scholarly work and attempts to contextualize it in debates around global governance and global constitutionalism. These debates are no longer confined to international lawyers or political scientists. Together with anthropologists, sociologists, geographers and legal philosophers and legal theorists, these scholars have been significantly widening the scope of their investigation. The current, multi - and interdisciplinary research into the prospects of political sovereignty, democratic governance an...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
[T]he recent proposal made by Terence Halliday and Gregory Shaffer for a concept of “transnational l...
International law\u27s traditional emphasis on state practice has long been questioned, as scholars ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
The paper takes the currently much belabored concepts of “global governance” and “global constitutio...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
This chapter provides an overview of the emerging field of transnational constitutional law (TCL). W...
Transnational law is an institutional framework for cross-border interaction beyond the nation state...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
Taking “extraterritoriality,” the traditional touchstone for the state-centered allocation of transn...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
[T]he recent proposal made by Terence Halliday and Gregory Shaffer for a concept of “transnational l...
International law\u27s traditional emphasis on state practice has long been questioned, as scholars ...
This paper draws out the analogies and connections between long-standing legal sociological insights...
The paper takes the currently much belabored concepts of “global governance” and “global constitutio...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
When Jessup first wrote about transnational law about 60 years ago, scholarship on globalisation had...
This chapter provides an overview of the emerging field of transnational constitutional law (TCL). W...
Transnational law is an institutional framework for cross-border interaction beyond the nation state...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
In Jessup’s 1956 Storrs Lecture he defined transnational law as “all law which regulates actions or ...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
Taking “extraterritoriality,” the traditional touchstone for the state-centered allocation of transn...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
[T]he recent proposal made by Terence Halliday and Gregory Shaffer for a concept of “transnational l...
International law\u27s traditional emphasis on state practice has long been questioned, as scholars ...