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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nico Krisch (Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.750kg ISBN: 9781108823791ISBN 10: 1108823793 Pages: 400 Publication Date: 11 November 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. Introduction: Framing entangled legalities beyond the state Nico Krisch; Part I. Entangling State Law: 2. Denial, deferral, translation: dynamics of entangling and disentangling state and non-state law in postcolonial spaces Tobias Berger; 3. To be is to be entangled: Indigenous treaty-making, relational legalities and the ecological grounds of law Kirsten Anker; 4. And an algorithm to entangle them all? Social credit, data-driven governance, and legal entanglement in post-law legal orders Larry Catá Backer; 5. Belt, road and (legal) suspenders: Entangled legalities on the 'New Silk Road' Tomer Broude; Part II. International Law and its Interfaces: 6. Giving due consideration: A normative pathway between UN human rights treaty monitoring bodies and domestic courts Machiko Kanetake; 7. The social life of entanglements between international investment and human rights norms in and beyond ISDS Francesco Corradini; 8. International trade law: Legal entanglement on the WTO's own terms Lucy Lu Reimers; Part III. Weaving Transnational Legalities: 9. Targeting bad apples or the whole barrel? The legal entanglements between targeted and comprehensive logics in counter-proliferation sanctions Grégoire Mallard and Aurel Niederberger; 10. Seamstress of transnational law: How the court of arbitration for sport weaves the Lex Sportiva Antoine Duval; 11. The struggle for international financial standards: An historical analysis of entangling legalities in finance Francesco Corradini; 12. Hidden in the shades: Patterns of entanglement within the web of corporate social responsibility law Tomáš Morochovič and Lucy Lu Reimers; Part IV. Situating Entanglements: 13. Entangled legalities beyond the (Byzantine) state: Towards a user theory of jurisdiction Caroline Humfress; 14. Entanglement of state and indigenous legal orders in Canada Keith Culver and Michael Giudice; 15. Entangled hopes: Towards relational coherence Julia Eckert; 16. Tertiary rules Ralf Michaels; 17. A reconstruction of transnational legal pluralism and law's foundations Brian Z. Tamanaha.Reviews'This is a rich and welcome collection of essays by a diverse array of interesting scholars from multiple disciplines, exploring the complex and pluralist world of law and legalities, and their interaction and entanglement beyond the state. The essays range from studies of social credit systems, to international trade and investment law, indigenous law, various human rights regimes and norms, targeted sanctions, private international law, sports law, and more. There are also several stimulating theoretical essays, including the introduction and conclusion by two of the leading scholars of constitutional and legal pluralism, Nico Krisch and Brian Tamanaha.' Grainne de Burca, Florence Ellinwood Allen Professor of Law, NYU 'This collection, with its stellar cast of contributors, is a must-read for anyone trying to understand today's fast changing global legal landscape. Its central concept of 'entanglement' invites a rich exploration of the ways in which our local legal orders increasingly form an interpenetrated whole.' Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, University of Edinburgh 'This collection, with its stellar cast of contributors, is a must-read for anyone trying to understand today's fast changing global legal landscape. Its central concept of 'entanglement' invites a rich exploration of the ways in which our local legal orders increasingly form an interpenetrated whole.' Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations, University of Edinburgh 'This is a rich and welcome collection of essays by a diverse array of interesting scholars from multiple disciplines, exploring the complex and pluralist world of law and legalities, and their interaction and entanglement beyond the state. The essays range from studies of social credit systems, to international trade and investment law, indigenous law, various human rights regimes and norms, targeted sanctions, private international law, sports law, and more. There are also several stimulating theoretical essays, including the introduction and conclusion by two of the leading scholars of constitutional and legal pluralism, Nico Krisch and Brian Tamanaha.' Grainne de Burca, Florence Ellinwood Allen Professor of Law, NYU Author InformationNico Krisch is a professor of international law at the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies in Geneva. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |