International economic law in the 21st century: constitutional pluralism and multilevel governance of interdependent public goods/ Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann

By: Petersmann,Ernst-UlrichMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford: Hart Pub, 2012Description: xxxiii, 540 pISBN: 9781849460637 Subject(s): Demokratieprinzip | Internationales Wirtschaftsrecht | MenschenrechtDDC classification: 341.75
Contents:
Introduction and Overview: The Crisis of International Economic Law I How Should International Economic Law be Designed in Order to Protect 'Interdependent Public Goods' More Effectively? II The Emergence of Cosmopolitan IEL Based on Respect for 'Constitutional Pluralism' III 'Civilizing' and 'Constitutionalizing' IEL Requires Cosmopolitan Restraints of Public and Private Power IV Legal and Political Strategies for Making Multilevel Economic Regulation Consistent with Human Rights V Regulating the 'Tragedy of the Commons' and 'Interdependent Public Goods' Requires Transnational Rule of Law VI Transnational Rule of Law Must be Justified by an 'Overlapping Consensus' on Principles of JusticeVII The Need for Constitutional Reforms of the Law of International Organizations: The Example of the World Trading System VIII 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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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Central Library, Sikkim University
General Book Section
341.75 PET/I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available P29605
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Introduction and Overview: The Crisis of International Economic Law I How Should International Economic Law be Designed in Order to Protect 'Interdependent Public Goods' More Effectively? II The Emergence of Cosmopolitan IEL Based on Respect for 'Constitutional Pluralism' III 'Civilizing' and 'Constitutionalizing' IEL Requires Cosmopolitan Restraints of Public and Private Power IV Legal and Political Strategies for Making Multilevel Economic Regulation Consistent with Human Rights V Regulating the 'Tragedy of the Commons' and 'Interdependent Public Goods' Requires Transnational Rule of Law VI Transnational Rule of Law Must be Justified by an 'Overlapping Consensus' on Principles of JusticeVII The Need for Constitutional Reforms of the Law of International Organizations: The Example of the World Trading System VIII 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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