While it might have been viable for states to isolate themselves
from international politics in the nineteenth century, the
intensity of economic and social globalisation in the twenty-first
century has made this impossible. The contemporary world is an
international world - a world of collective security systems and
collective trade agreements. What does this mean for the sovereign
state and 'its' international legal order? Two alternative
approaches to the problem of 'governance' in the era of
globalisation have developed in the twentieth century: universal
internationalism and regional supranationalism. The first
approaches collective action problems from the perspective of the
'sovereign equality' of all States. A second approach to
transnational 'governance' has tried to re-build majoritarian
governmental structures at the regional scale. This collection of
essays wishes to analyse - and contrast - the two types of
normative and decisional answers that have emerged as responses to
the 'international' problems within our globalised world.
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