Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Global Law Series-serien

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  • av Daphna (Tel-Aviv University) Hacker
    441,-

    This book provides a detailed exploration of the interrelations between globalization, borders and families through a legal lens embedded in sociological theories and empirical data. Its socio-legal nature will have a broad appeal for readers interested in family, immigration and labor law, as well as globalization and other studies.

  • av Hans (Queen Mary University of London) Lindahl
    520,-

    Explains why and illustrates how global law emerges as a process of inclusion and exclusion. Suitable for graduate courses on theory of global law, sociology of legal globalisation, politics of globalisation processes, philosophy of law, political philosophy, global governance, and global and transnational constitutionalism.

  • av Chris (University of Manchester) Thornhill
    590 - 1 496,-

    A new legal-sociological account of contemporary democracy, arguing that it is best understood through a transposition of key insights of classical legal sociology onto the form of global society. It will appeal to post-graduate students in law, political science and the sociology of law, as well as institutional transformation researchers. This title is also available as Open Access.

  • av Neil Walker
    471 - 844,-

    A strain of law reaching beyond any bounded international or transnational remit to assert a global jurisdiction has recently acquired a new prominence. Intimations of Global Law detects this strain in structures of international law claiming a planetary scope independent of state consent, in new threads of global constitutional law, administrative law and human rights, and in revived notions of ius gentium and the global rule of law. It is also visible in the legal pursuit of functionally differentiated global public goods, general conflict rules, norms of 'legal pluralism' and new legal hybrids such as the global law of peace and humanity law. The coming of global law affects how law manifests itself in a global age and alters the shape of our legal-ethical horizons. Global law presents a diverse, unsettled and sometimes conflicted legal category, and one which challenges our very understanding of the rudiments of legal authority.

  • av The Netherlands) Paiement & Phillip (Tilburg University
    471 - 755,-

    This book appeals to legal scholars and students interested in socio-legal studies, transnational law, environmental law, labour law, and legal theory. It introduces them to sustainability standards more commonly studied by political scientists and sociologists, and analyses their capacity to function as a form of transnational legal governance.

  • av Amnon Lehavi
    463,-

    This book identifies the main challenges that processes of globalization pose for the study and practice of property law. It offers a clear analysis of legal scenarios implicating cross-border property rights, covering a range of resources, from land, goods, and intangible financial assets, to intellectual property, data, and digital assets.

  • av Christopher (University of Manchester) Thornhill
    443 - 1 407,-

    This book explains the current weakness of democratic polities by examining deep paradoxes in constitutional democracy. It argues that democracy is frequently exposed to crisis because the terms in which it is promoted and justified allow anti-democratic movements, typically with a populist emphasis, to take shape and flourish.

  • - UN Counterterrorism Sanctions and the Politics of Global Security Law
    av Canterbury) Sullivan & Gavin (University of Kent
    547 - 1 645,-

    This book is a study of global security law in motion, and is the first detailed socio-legal analysis of the UN Security Council's counterterrorism listing regime. It engages with current debates in international law, critical security studies, global governance, Science and Technology Studies, governmentality scholarship and socio-legal studies.

  • - Globalisation, Constitutionalism and Market Capture
    av Emilios (University of Glasgow) Christodoulidis
    551 - 1 571,-

    This major new work of constitutional theory looks at the relationship between constitutions and markets, and how it affects our understanding of citizenship and rights. It criticises the way in which thinking about markets at the national, European and global levels has deformed the democratic understanding of the constitution.

  • - How the UN Security Council Rules the World
     
    443,-

    This book will be of use to scholars and students interested in counter-terrorism measures, as well as practitioners and policy-makers dealing with human rights issues. It will be useful to those who carry out judicial or quasi-judicial tasks, since it addresses, theoretically and practically, the balance between rights and security.

  • - How the UN Security Council Rules the World
     
    1 400,-

    This book will be of use to scholars and students interested in counter-terrorism measures, as well as practitioners and policy-makers dealing with human rights issues. It will be useful to those who carry out judicial or quasi-judicial tasks, since it addresses, theoretically and practically, the balance between rights and security.

  •  
    523,-

    This volume - featuring eminent contributors from law, political science, sociology, anthropology, history and political theory - shows that law is often better understood as an entangled web than a coherent system, analysing the ways in which different legalities in domestic, transnational and international law are connected.

  •  
    1 630,-

    This volume - featuring eminent contributors from law, political science, sociology, anthropology, history and political theory - shows that law is often better understood as an entangled web than a coherent system, analysing the ways in which different legalities in domestic, transnational and international law are connected.

  • av Aoife O'Donoghue
    1 482,-

    Since classical antiquity debates about tyranny, tyrannicide and preventing tyranny's re-emergence have permeated governance discourse. Yet within the literature on the global legal order, tyranny is missing. This book creates a taxonomy of tyranny and poses the question: could the global legal order be tyrannical? This taxonomy examines the benefits attached to tyrannical governance for the tyrant, considers how illegitimacy and fear establish tyranny, asks how rule by law, silence and beneficence aid in governing a tyranny. It outlines the modalities of tyranny: scale, imperialism, gender, and bureaucracy. Where it is determined that a tyranny exists, the book examines the extent of the right and duty to effect tyrannicide. As the global legal order gathers ever more power to itself, it becomes imperative to ask whether tyranny lurks at the global scale.

  • av Hans Lindahl
    858,-

    Protracted and bitter resistance by alter- and anti-globalisation movements shows that the globalisation of law transpires as the globalisation of inclusion and exclusion. Humanity is inside and outside global law in all its possible manifestations. But how is this possible? How must legal orders be structured, such that, even if we can now speak of law beyond state borders, no emergent global legal order is possible that does not include without excluding? Is an authoritative politics of boundaries possible that neither postulates the possibility of realising an all-inclusive global legal order nor accepts resignation or political paralysis in the face of the globalisation of inclusion and exclusion? These pressing questions guide this book, opening up a vast field of enquiry that demands integrating sociological, doctrinal and philosophical perspectives and insights.

  • av Siddharth Peter De Souza
    1 252,-

    Designing Indicators for a Plural Legal World engages with the role of quantification in law, and its impact on law and development and judicial reform. It seeks to examine how different institutions shape and influence the making and use of legal indicators globally. This book sheds light on the limitations of existing quantification tools, which measure rule of law due to their lack of engagement with contexts and countries in the Global South. It offers an alternative framework for measurement, which moves away from an institutional look at rule of law, to a bottom up, user centered approach that places importance on the lives that people lead, and the challenges that they face. In doing so, it offers a way of thinking about access to justice in terms of human capabilities.

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