The fragmentation of the international legal system is not new. The consent-based nature of international law inevitably led to the creation of almost as many treaty regimes, composed of different constellations of states, as there are problems to be dealt with. Traditionally, these different regimes operated in virtual isolation from each other. Most importantly, the Bretton Woods institutions (World Bank, IMF, and GATT, now WTO) focused on the world\u27s economic problems, while the UN institutions tackled the world\u27s political problems. Both the IMF and World Bank articles of agreement, for example, explicitly state that political factors cannot be taken into account. Operations are to be based (e.g. loans are to be distributed) solel...
The World Trade Organization (WTO), established in 1994, has been criticized for not sufficiently ac...
This Article addresses the fragmentation of international law and international legal theory. This p...
This article examines the concept and metaphor of fragmentation and its underlying assumptions in i...
International law’s accelerating “fragmentation” presents the international legal system with what l...
Presented at Palma Workshop, 20-21 May 2005, on Unity and Fragmentation in International Law
Is international law in crisis, torn as it is between assertions of its unity and the growth of regi...
International economic law (IEL) continues to evolve through dialectic processes of unilateral, bila...
Since the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, international law has basically been understood as law gover...
Fragmentation of international law Fragmentation is understood to be a “consequence of the expansion...
As international law grows and spreads into non-traditional areas such as the international ecosyste...
A growing body of interdisciplinary scholarship addresses the issue of global constitutionalism. Sch...
This short essay, published as part of the proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American S...
A growing body of interdisciplinary scholarship addresses the issue of global constitutionalism. Sch...
In 1982, I edited a volume on international regimes, a term that was just coming into wider usage in...
This introduction reviews scholarship on international legal fragmentation, lays out a framework for...
The World Trade Organization (WTO), established in 1994, has been criticized for not sufficiently ac...
This Article addresses the fragmentation of international law and international legal theory. This p...
This article examines the concept and metaphor of fragmentation and its underlying assumptions in i...
International law’s accelerating “fragmentation” presents the international legal system with what l...
Presented at Palma Workshop, 20-21 May 2005, on Unity and Fragmentation in International Law
Is international law in crisis, torn as it is between assertions of its unity and the growth of regi...
International economic law (IEL) continues to evolve through dialectic processes of unilateral, bila...
Since the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, international law has basically been understood as law gover...
Fragmentation of international law Fragmentation is understood to be a “consequence of the expansion...
As international law grows and spreads into non-traditional areas such as the international ecosyste...
A growing body of interdisciplinary scholarship addresses the issue of global constitutionalism. Sch...
This short essay, published as part of the proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American S...
A growing body of interdisciplinary scholarship addresses the issue of global constitutionalism. Sch...
In 1982, I edited a volume on international regimes, a term that was just coming into wider usage in...
This introduction reviews scholarship on international legal fragmentation, lays out a framework for...
The World Trade Organization (WTO), established in 1994, has been criticized for not sufficiently ac...
This Article addresses the fragmentation of international law and international legal theory. This p...
This article examines the concept and metaphor of fragmentation and its underlying assumptions in i...