International Economi Law in the 21st Century: constitutional pluralism and multilevel governance of interdependent public goods/ Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann

By: Petersmann, Ernst-UlrichMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2012Description: xxxiii, 540 pISBN: 9781849460637Subject(s): International economic relations | Foreign trade regulation | Human rights -- Economic aspectsDDC classification: 343.074
Contents:
Introduction and overview. The crisis of international economic law -- How should international economic law be designed in order to protect "interdependent public goods" more effectively? -- The emergence of cosmopolitan IEL based on respect for "constitutional pluralism" -- "Civilizing" and "constitutionalizing" IEL requires cosmopolitan restraints of public and private power -- Legal and political strategies for making multilevel economic regulation consistent with human rights -- Regulating the "tragedy of the commons" and "interdependent public goods" requires transnational rule of law -- Transnational rule of law must be justified by an "overlapping consensus" on principles of justice -- The need for constitutional reforms of the law of international organizations : the example of the world trading system -- From "constitutional nationalism" to multilevel judicial protection of cosmopolitan rights in IEL -- Conclusions and research agenda for IEL in the twenty-first century.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Central Library, Sikkim University
General Book Section
343.074 PET/I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available P29351
Total holds: 0

Introduction and overview. The crisis of international economic law --
How should international economic law be designed in order to protect "interdependent public goods" more effectively? --
The emergence of cosmopolitan IEL based on respect for "constitutional pluralism" --
"Civilizing" and "constitutionalizing" IEL requires cosmopolitan restraints of public and private power --
Legal and political strategies for making multilevel economic regulation consistent with human rights --
Regulating the "tragedy of the commons" and "interdependent public goods" requires transnational rule of law --
Transnational rule of law must be justified by an "overlapping consensus" on principles of justice --
The need for constitutional reforms of the law of international organizations : the example of the world trading system --
From "constitutional nationalism" to multilevel judicial protection of cosmopolitan rights in IEL --
Conclusions and research agenda for IEL in the twenty-first century.

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