The question of which European or international institution should exercise public authority is a highly contested one. This new collection offers an innovative approach to answering this vexed question. It argues that by viewing public authority as relative, it allows for greater understanding of both its allocation and its legitimacy. Furthermore, it argues that relations between actors should reflect the comparative analysis of the legitimacy assets that each actor can bring into governance processes. Put succinctly, the volume illustrates that public authority is relative between actors and relative to specific legitimacy assets. Drawing on the expertise of leading scholars in the field, it offers a thought-provoking and rigorous ...
"I’ve spoken about authority in the context laid out by Article 38 of the ICJ Statute, that is, wher...
Global governance rests on the exercise of public authority by a myriad of actors. In the internatio...
The form of authority that international law enjoys over states, and for what reasons, has long been...
The question of which European or international institution should exercise public authority is a hi...
The present contribution reacts to concerns about the legitimacy of supra- and international public ...
The present contribution reacts to concerns about the legitimacy of supra- and international public ...
This article aims to identify, analyse, frame the emergence of and advance a multidimensional unders...
These texts on the legitimacy of international courts were framed as a direct reaction to arguments ...
How should international law’s role in determining international distributive outcomes, economic and...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
The increasing transnationalisation of regulation – and social life more generally – challenges the ...
Our lives are increasingly governed by decisions taken beyond the state— examples include ICJ verdic...
Global governance rests on the exercise of public authority by a myriad of actors. In the internatio...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
"I’ve spoken about authority in the context laid out by Article 38 of the ICJ Statute, that is, wher...
Global governance rests on the exercise of public authority by a myriad of actors. In the internatio...
The form of authority that international law enjoys over states, and for what reasons, has long been...
The question of which European or international institution should exercise public authority is a hi...
The present contribution reacts to concerns about the legitimacy of supra- and international public ...
The present contribution reacts to concerns about the legitimacy of supra- and international public ...
This article aims to identify, analyse, frame the emergence of and advance a multidimensional unders...
These texts on the legitimacy of international courts were framed as a direct reaction to arguments ...
How should international law’s role in determining international distributive outcomes, economic and...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
The increasing transnationalisation of regulation – and social life more generally – challenges the ...
Our lives are increasingly governed by decisions taken beyond the state— examples include ICJ verdic...
Global governance rests on the exercise of public authority by a myriad of actors. In the internatio...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
"I’ve spoken about authority in the context laid out by Article 38 of the ICJ Statute, that is, wher...
Global governance rests on the exercise of public authority by a myriad of actors. In the internatio...
The form of authority that international law enjoys over states, and for what reasons, has long been...