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Victorious after World War II and the Cold War, the United States
and its allies largely wrote the rules for international trade and
investment. Yet, by 2020, it was the United States that became the
great disrupter - disenchanted with the rules' constraints.
Paradoxically, China, India, Brazil, and other emerging economies
became stakeholders in and, at times, defenders of economic
globalization and the rules regulating it. Emerging Powers and the
World Trading System explains how this came to be and addresses the
micropolitics of trade law - what has been developing under the
surface of the business of trade through the practice of law, which
has broad macro implications. This book provides a necessary
complement to political and economic accounts for understanding
why, at a time of hegemonic transition where economic security and
geopolitics assume greater roles, the United States challenged, and
emerging powers became defenders, of the legal order that the
United States created.
Hard and soft law developed by international and regional
organizations, transgovernmental networks, and international courts
increasingly shape rules, procedures, and practices governing
criminalization, policing, prosecution, and punishment. This
dynamic calls into question traditional approaches that study
criminal justice from a predominantly national perspective, or that
dichotomize the study of international from national criminal law.
Building on socio-legal theories of transnational legal ordering,
this book develops a new approach for studying the interaction
between international and domestic criminal law and practice.
Distinguished scholars from different disciplines apply this
approach in ten case studies of transnational legal ordering that
address transnational crimes such as money laundering, corruption,
and human trafficking, international crimes such as mass
atrocities, and human rights abuses in law enforcement. The book
provides a comprehensive treatment of the changing transnational
nature of criminal justice policymaking and practice in today's
globalized world.
Since the rise of the nation-state in the nineteenth century,
constitutions have been seen as an embodiment of national values
and identity. However, individuals, ideas, and institutions from
abroad have always influenced constitutions, and so the process is
better described as transnational. As cross-border interaction is
increasing in intensity, a dominant transnational legal order for
constitutions has emerged, with its own norms, guidelines and
shared ideas. Yet both the process and substance of
constitution-making are being contested in divergent and insurgent
constitutional orders. Bringing together leading scholars from the
United States, Europe, Latin America, and Asia, this volume
addresses the actors, networks, norms and processes involved in
constitution-making, as well as the related challenges, from a
transnational and comparative perspective. Drawing from the
research on transnational legal orders, this work explores and
examines constitution-making in every region of the world.
Hard and soft law developed by international and regional
organizations, transgovernmental networks, and international courts
increasingly shape rules, procedures, and practices governing
criminalization, policing, prosecution, and punishment. This
dynamic calls into question traditional approaches that study
criminal justice from a predominantly national perspective, or that
dichotomize the study of international from national criminal law.
Building on socio-legal theories of transnational legal ordering,
this book develops a new approach for studying the interaction
between international and domestic criminal law and practice.
Distinguished scholars from different disciplines apply this
approach in ten case studies of transnational legal ordering that
address transnational crimes such as money laundering, corruption,
and human trafficking, international crimes such as mass
atrocities, and human rights abuses in law enforcement. The book
provides a comprehensive treatment of the changing transnational
nature of criminal justice policymaking and practice in today's
globalized world.
This book, with contributors from nine countries, seeks to
critically understand the processes of legal education reform and
resistance and to point to what these processes mean for law and
lawyers inside and outside of the United States. The book seeks to
understand the forces driving these processes and to evaluate their
implications. Its substantive chapters provide critical insights
into how these transnational processes operate in different
jurisdictions around the world in light of globalization and local
competition. Taken together, the chapters show how institutions and
practices of legal education have historically moved across
jurisdictions and shaped legal education practices transnationally,
as well as the challenges and limits these processes have faced.
The chapters also show how that diffusion relates to empires and
imperial competition, and in particular today to the rise in power
of the United States after the Cold War-and the related diffusion
of neoliberal economic policies that have also fueled the spread of
corporate law firms modeled on the United States. The book shows
how local processes play and evolve in relation to global balances
of power. This is an open access title available under the terms of
a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence.
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Transnational Fiduciary Law
Seth Davis, Thilo Kuntz, Gregory Shaffer
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R2,887
R2,494
Discovery Miles 24 940
Save R393 (14%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Fiduciary law is important transnationally, particularly in the
context of global capitalism. Fiduciary law's characteristic regard
for others offers a response to the pursuit of unconstrained
self-interest in business and government relations, potentially
implicating the exercise of both private and public power.
Stakeholders have invoked it not only to address traditional
private law matters, but also to enjoin transnational corporations
to respect human rights, to combat public corruption, and to
constrain national governments to respect the rights of Indigenous
Peoples. This book focuses on the processes through which
conceptualizations of fiduciary relationships and fiduciary norms
may (or may not) settle transnationally - or become unsettled - as
actors invoke fiduciary norms to address problems in different
domains, including across borders. It identifies complications and
challenges of any transnational convergence of fiduciary norms that
fiduciary theorists often elide. This book is also available as
Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Victorious after World War II and the Cold War, the United States
and its allies largely wrote the rules for international trade and
investment. Yet, by 2020, it was the United States that became the
great disrupter - disenchanted with the rules' constraints.
Paradoxically, China, India, Brazil, and other emerging economies
became stakeholders in and, at times, defenders of economic
globalization and the rules regulating it. Emerging Powers and the
World Trading System explains how this came to be and addresses the
micropolitics of trade law - what has been developing under the
surface of the business of trade through the practice of law, which
has broad macro implications. This book provides a necessary
complement to political and economic accounts for understanding
why, at a time of hegemonic transition where economic security and
geopolitics assume greater roles, the United States challenged, and
emerging powers became defenders, of the legal order that the
United States created.
Since the rise of the nation-state in the nineteenth century,
constitutions have been seen as an embodiment of national values
and identity. However, individuals, ideas, and institutions from
abroad have always influenced constitutions, and so the process is
better described as transnational. As cross-border interaction is
increasing in intensity, a dominant transnational legal order for
constitutions has emerged, with its own norms, guidelines and
shared ideas. Yet both the process and substance of
constitution-making are being contested in divergent and insurgent
constitutional orders. Bringing together leading scholars from the
United States, Europe, Latin America, and Asia, this volume
addresses the actors, networks, norms and processes involved in
constitution-making, as well as the related challenges, from a
transnational and comparative perspective. Drawing from the
research on transnational legal orders, this work explores and
examines constitution-making in every region of the world.
This book offers a pathbreaking, empirically grounded theory that
reframes the study of law and society from a predominantly national
context, which dichotomizes the study of international law and
national compliance into a dynamic perspective that places
national, international, and transnational lawmaking and practice
within a coherent single frame. By presenting and elaborating on a
new concept, transnational legal orders, this book offers an
original approach to the emergence of legal orders beyond
nation-states. It shows how they originate, where they compete and
cooperate, and how they settle on institutions that legally order
fundamental economic and social behaviors that transcend national
borders. This original theory is applied and developed by
distinguished scholars from North America and Europe in business
law (corporate bankruptcy, transport of goods by sea, secured
transactions law, and international taxation), regulatory law
(monetary and trade, finance, food safety, and climate change), and
human rights (rule of law, use of indicators regarding human rights
treaties, trials of political leaders, right to health and access
to medicines, and human trafficking).
This book offers a pathbreaking, empirically grounded theory that
reframes the study of law and society from a predominantly national
context, which dichotomizes the study of international law and
national compliance into a dynamic perspective that places
national, international, and transnational lawmaking and practice
within a coherent single frame. By presenting and elaborating on a
new concept, transnational legal orders, this book offers an
original approach to the emergence of legal orders beyond
nation-states. It shows how they originate, where they compete and
cooperate, and how they settle on institutions that legally order
fundamental economic and social behaviors that transcend national
borders. This original theory is applied and developed by
distinguished scholars from North America and Europe in business
law (corporate bankruptcy, transport of goods by sea, secured
transactions law, and international taxation), regulatory law
(monetary and trade, finance, food safety, and climate change), and
human rights (rule of law, use of indicators regarding human rights
treaties, trials of political leaders, right to health and access
to medicines, and human trafficking).
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