This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary International Relations, the European Journal of International Relations. The article looks at the “rule of law” topos in global governance scholarship, and specifically questions how liberal IL and IR scholars, such as Anne-Marie Slaughter, equate the “rule of law” with the American judicial model expressed in the US Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison. My argument provides a Foucauldian critique of Anne-Marie Slaughter’s vision of a “global community of courts”, bringing into question whether the expansion of international courts and tribunals will deliver genuine constitutional rule at the global level and, ultimately, the rule of “no one”. A re...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
Published online before print November 18, 2010This article challenges the optimism common to libera...
This article challenges the optimism common to liberal IR and IL scholarship on the ‘rule of law’ in...
Abstract This article challenges the optimism common to liberal IR and IL scholarship on the 'rule ...
This book explores whether the co-existence of (partially) overlapping and sometimes competing layer...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
This article addresses the following question: Is Global Law merely a trendy theory, or are there co...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
Published online before print November 18, 2010This article challenges the optimism common to libera...
This article challenges the optimism common to liberal IR and IL scholarship on the ‘rule of law’ in...
Abstract This article challenges the optimism common to liberal IR and IL scholarship on the 'rule ...
This book explores whether the co-existence of (partially) overlapping and sometimes competing layer...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
This article addresses the following question: Is Global Law merely a trendy theory, or are there co...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
This Article proposes that international law is undergoing a paradigm shift, which will have signifi...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
The emergent ‘global law’ and global governance are often evoked as a multiversum in the absence of ...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...