For most of the past sixty years, the United States and Europe have led, independently and collectively, the international legal system. Yet, the rise of the BRICs over the past decade has caused a profound transformation of global politics. This paper examines the implications of this redistribution of power for international law. While international lawyers have long debated the ability of law to constrain state behavior, this paper shifts the debate from the power of law to the role of power within international law. It first advances a structural argument that the diffusion, disaggregation, and issue-specific asymmetries in the distribution of power are giving rise to a multi-hub structure for international law, distinct from past struc...
New emerging international dynamics introduce a global poly-axiological polycentric disorder which u...
Abstract: Although this paper is entitled “The Transformation of International Law”, it does not put...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
For most of the past sixty years, the United States and Europe have led, independently and collectiv...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
Reinold and Heupel's introductory chapter articulates the volume's overarching research question, su...
Globalization is transforming the contemporary international system. Two major developments have ari...
This book explores the impacts of global economic, political and cultural shifts on various internat...
This paper seeks to understand the impact of the ongoing shifts in global politics upon the operatio...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
This book explores whether the co-existence of (partially) overlapping and sometimes competing layer...
The way that actors create, implement, and control international law is far more complex today than ...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governanceExplore...
New emerging international dynamics introduce a global poly-axiological polycentric disorder which u...
Abstract: Although this paper is entitled “The Transformation of International Law”, it does not put...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
For most of the past sixty years, the United States and Europe have led, independently and collectiv...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
Reinold and Heupel's introductory chapter articulates the volume's overarching research question, su...
Globalization is transforming the contemporary international system. Two major developments have ari...
This book explores the impacts of global economic, political and cultural shifts on various internat...
This paper seeks to understand the impact of the ongoing shifts in global politics upon the operatio...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
This book explores whether the co-existence of (partially) overlapping and sometimes competing layer...
The way that actors create, implement, and control international law is far more complex today than ...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
Global Legal Pluralism is now recognized as an entrenched reality of the international and transnati...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governanceExplore...
New emerging international dynamics introduce a global poly-axiological polycentric disorder which u...
Abstract: Although this paper is entitled “The Transformation of International Law”, it does not put...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...