This paper is the concluding chapter of the edited volume ‘the rule of law at the national and international levels: contestations and deference’. The paper first provides some patterns of national contestations (section I) and international deference (section II). The paper moves on to identify some of the shortcomings of the process of developing international law through national contestations and international deference (section III). Our overall argument is that the cycle of national contestations and international responses can be conceptualized as an integral part of the rule of law in the international legal order (section IV)
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
This article aims to offer a definition of the international rule of law. It does this through clari...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
The international and transnational nature of modern governance presents major challenges for the ru...
The interfaces between national and international law have significantly evolved due to subject-matt...
This short paper argues that in the next decades we are likely to see a fundamental separation in th...
In this Chapter, the relationships between international and domestic law are explored for the purpo...
The question of the sources of international law inevitably raises some well-known scholarly controv...
This paper addresses some of the conceptual challenges that internationalisation of the rule of law ...
This paper addresses some of the conceptual challenges that internationalisation of the rule of law ...
The international law is a newly established system of a primary character by which one sets suprana...
An international rule of law complementing modern states domestic rule of law seems to be emerging. ...
The manifestation of the international rule of law appears as one of the possible paths to check the...
More than 2,000 years have passed since the idea of the “rule of law” appeared in Western culture. B...
The central premise of this volume is that the relationship of law and politics in international law...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
This article aims to offer a definition of the international rule of law. It does this through clari...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
The international and transnational nature of modern governance presents major challenges for the ru...
The interfaces between national and international law have significantly evolved due to subject-matt...
This short paper argues that in the next decades we are likely to see a fundamental separation in th...
In this Chapter, the relationships between international and domestic law are explored for the purpo...
The question of the sources of international law inevitably raises some well-known scholarly controv...
This paper addresses some of the conceptual challenges that internationalisation of the rule of law ...
This paper addresses some of the conceptual challenges that internationalisation of the rule of law ...
The international law is a newly established system of a primary character by which one sets suprana...
An international rule of law complementing modern states domestic rule of law seems to be emerging. ...
The manifestation of the international rule of law appears as one of the possible paths to check the...
More than 2,000 years have passed since the idea of the “rule of law” appeared in Western culture. B...
The central premise of this volume is that the relationship of law and politics in international law...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
This article aims to offer a definition of the international rule of law. It does this through clari...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...