58,85 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
0 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

This book compares the evolution of the legal systems of Central Asia, Europe, and East Asia, under the impact of economic factors, both structural and crisis-inspired. The COVID-19, one of the severest challenges faced by humanity, alters the social order and the way people think.
Already, changes impact the socio-economic and political-legal spheres. Geopolitical and geoeconomic shifts affect the place of states and regions in the world order. The UK's withdrawal from the EU, superimposed onto the pandemic, inflicted not only political and socio-economic losses but reputational losses as…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book compares the evolution of the legal systems of Central Asia, Europe, and East Asia, under the impact of economic factors, both structural and crisis-inspired. The COVID-19, one of the severest challenges faced by humanity, alters the social order and the way people think.

Already, changes impact the socio-economic and political-legal spheres. Geopolitical and geoeconomic shifts affect the place of states and regions in the world order. The UK's withdrawal from the EU, superimposed onto the pandemic, inflicted not only political and socio-economic losses but reputational losses as well. It signaled the limits of regional integration if the world's most successful economic grouping needed to revise its own development.

This book analyses three salient international political/legal problems for states and regions of Eurasia: trade and financial issues, regional and interregional issues, industrial and socioeconomic issues. It also looks at the US trade policy towards Eurasia and China, the US military presence in South Korea, the EU experience for the EAEU, as well as WTO issues, etc. It follows Le régionalisme et ses limites (2016), Mutations de société et réponses du droit (2017), On the European and Asian origins of legal and political systems (2018) and The Challenge of change in the legal and political systems of Eurasia and the New Silk Road (2020).
Autorenporträt
Amandine Cayol (Private Law, PhD-Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne) is Associate Professor at Université Caen Normandie and Director of the Master's in Insurance Law. Hye-Hwal Seong (Law, PhD), Professor of Law at the Law School of InHa University, South-Korea; New York Bar Association; vice-president of the Korea Securities Law Association. Remus Titiriga (Law, PhD-Nancy University, France) is Professor of Law at the Law School of InHa University, specialising in international economic law and trade law. Pierre Chabal (Political Science, PhD-Grenoble IEP), Dr of Science in International Relations (Paris IEP) founded the Kazakh-Franco- Korean law seminar at Université Le Havre Normandie.