Making Transnational Law Work in the Global Economy
Essays in Honour of Detlev Vagts
Herausgeber: Bekker, Pieter H. F.; Waibel, Michael; Dolzer, Rudolf Auteur
Making Transnational Law Work in the Global Economy
Essays in Honour of Detlev Vagts
Herausgeber: Bekker, Pieter H. F.; Waibel, Michael; Dolzer, Rudolf Auteur
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This book takes stock and assesses the prospects of transnational law, in tribute to Professor Detlev Vagts of the Harvard Law School.
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This book takes stock and assesses the prospects of transnational law, in tribute to Professor Detlev Vagts of the Harvard Law School.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 720
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1176g
- ISBN-13: 9780521192521
- ISBN-10: 0521192528
- Artikelnr.: 31193110
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 720
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1176g
- ISBN-13: 9780521192521
- ISBN-10: 0521192528
- Artikelnr.: 31193110
Foreword. The transnationalism of Detlev Vagts Harold Hongju Koh; 1.
Introduction. A festschrift to celebrate Detlev Vagts' contributions to
transnational law Pieter Bekker, Rudolf Dolzer and Michael Waibel; 2.
Detlev Vagts and the Harvard Law School William Alford; 3. Constructing and
developing transnational law: the contribution of Detlev Vagts Henry
Steiner; Part I. International Law in General: 4. 'Hegemonic international
law' in retrospect Anthony Anghie; 5. Textual interpretation and
(international) law reading: the myth of (in) determinacy and the genealogy
of meaning Andrea Bianchi; 6. The changing role of the State in the
globalizing world economy Jost Delbrück; 7. Sources of human rights
obligations binding the UN Security Council Bardo Fassbender; 8. Is
transnational law eclipsing international law? Daniel Kalderimis; 9.
Participation in WTO and foreign direct investment - national or community
competences Juliane Kokott; 10. From dualism to pluralism: the relationship
between international law, European law and domestic law Andreas Paulus;
11. Transnational law comprises constitutional, administrative, criminal,
and quasi-private law Anne Peters; 12. Founding myths, international law
and voting rights in the District of Columbia Siegfried Wiessner; 13. The
tormented relationship between international law and EU law Jan Wouters;
14. International law scholarship in times of dictatorship and democracy -
exemplified by the life and work of Wilhelm Wengler Andreas Zimmermann;
Part II. Transnational Economic Law: 15. Sovereignty-plus in the era of
interdependence: toward an international convention on combating human
rights violations by transnational corporations Olivier De Schutter; 16.
The noisy secrecy: Swiss banking law in international dispute Jean Nicolas
Druey; 17. Not-for-profit organisations, conflicts of laws, and the right
of establishment under the EC treaty Werner Ebke; 18. The meaning of
'investment' in the ICSID convention Barton Legum and Caline Mouawad; 19.
Toward a proper perspective of the private company's distinctiveness George
Nnona; 20. Administrative law and international law: the encounter of an
odd couple Hernán Pérez Loose; 21. Making transnational law a reality
through regime-building: the case of international investment law Jeswald
Salacuse; 22. Creditor protection in international law Michael Waibel; 23.
Stability, integration, and political modalities: some American reflections
on the European project after the financial crisis David Westbrook; Part
III. Transnational Lawyering and Dispute Resolution: 24. Diffusion of law:
the world court as a court of transnational justice Pieter Bekker; 25.
Regulating counsel conduct before international arbitral tribunals Charles
Brower and Stephan Schill; 26. International arbitrators as equity judges
Jan Dalhuisen; 27. Customary international law in United States courts: the
origins of the later-in-time rule William Dodge; 28. Mediation and civil
justice: a public-private partnership? Peter Murray; 29. The borders of
bias: rectitude in international arbitration William Park; 30. Managing
conflicts between rulings of the WTO and regional trade tribunals:
reflections on the Brazil-Tyres case Julia Ya Qin; 31. Cross-border
bankruptcy as a model for the regulation of international attorneys
Catherine Rogers.
Introduction. A festschrift to celebrate Detlev Vagts' contributions to
transnational law Pieter Bekker, Rudolf Dolzer and Michael Waibel; 2.
Detlev Vagts and the Harvard Law School William Alford; 3. Constructing and
developing transnational law: the contribution of Detlev Vagts Henry
Steiner; Part I. International Law in General: 4. 'Hegemonic international
law' in retrospect Anthony Anghie; 5. Textual interpretation and
(international) law reading: the myth of (in) determinacy and the genealogy
of meaning Andrea Bianchi; 6. The changing role of the State in the
globalizing world economy Jost Delbrück; 7. Sources of human rights
obligations binding the UN Security Council Bardo Fassbender; 8. Is
transnational law eclipsing international law? Daniel Kalderimis; 9.
Participation in WTO and foreign direct investment - national or community
competences Juliane Kokott; 10. From dualism to pluralism: the relationship
between international law, European law and domestic law Andreas Paulus;
11. Transnational law comprises constitutional, administrative, criminal,
and quasi-private law Anne Peters; 12. Founding myths, international law
and voting rights in the District of Columbia Siegfried Wiessner; 13. The
tormented relationship between international law and EU law Jan Wouters;
14. International law scholarship in times of dictatorship and democracy -
exemplified by the life and work of Wilhelm Wengler Andreas Zimmermann;
Part II. Transnational Economic Law: 15. Sovereignty-plus in the era of
interdependence: toward an international convention on combating human
rights violations by transnational corporations Olivier De Schutter; 16.
The noisy secrecy: Swiss banking law in international dispute Jean Nicolas
Druey; 17. Not-for-profit organisations, conflicts of laws, and the right
of establishment under the EC treaty Werner Ebke; 18. The meaning of
'investment' in the ICSID convention Barton Legum and Caline Mouawad; 19.
Toward a proper perspective of the private company's distinctiveness George
Nnona; 20. Administrative law and international law: the encounter of an
odd couple Hernán Pérez Loose; 21. Making transnational law a reality
through regime-building: the case of international investment law Jeswald
Salacuse; 22. Creditor protection in international law Michael Waibel; 23.
Stability, integration, and political modalities: some American reflections
on the European project after the financial crisis David Westbrook; Part
III. Transnational Lawyering and Dispute Resolution: 24. Diffusion of law:
the world court as a court of transnational justice Pieter Bekker; 25.
Regulating counsel conduct before international arbitral tribunals Charles
Brower and Stephan Schill; 26. International arbitrators as equity judges
Jan Dalhuisen; 27. Customary international law in United States courts: the
origins of the later-in-time rule William Dodge; 28. Mediation and civil
justice: a public-private partnership? Peter Murray; 29. The borders of
bias: rectitude in international arbitration William Park; 30. Managing
conflicts between rulings of the WTO and regional trade tribunals:
reflections on the Brazil-Tyres case Julia Ya Qin; 31. Cross-border
bankruptcy as a model for the regulation of international attorneys
Catherine Rogers.
Foreword. The transnationalism of Detlev Vagts Harold Hongju Koh; 1.
Introduction. A festschrift to celebrate Detlev Vagts' contributions to
transnational law Pieter Bekker, Rudolf Dolzer and Michael Waibel; 2.
Detlev Vagts and the Harvard Law School William Alford; 3. Constructing and
developing transnational law: the contribution of Detlev Vagts Henry
Steiner; Part I. International Law in General: 4. 'Hegemonic international
law' in retrospect Anthony Anghie; 5. Textual interpretation and
(international) law reading: the myth of (in) determinacy and the genealogy
of meaning Andrea Bianchi; 6. The changing role of the State in the
globalizing world economy Jost Delbrück; 7. Sources of human rights
obligations binding the UN Security Council Bardo Fassbender; 8. Is
transnational law eclipsing international law? Daniel Kalderimis; 9.
Participation in WTO and foreign direct investment - national or community
competences Juliane Kokott; 10. From dualism to pluralism: the relationship
between international law, European law and domestic law Andreas Paulus;
11. Transnational law comprises constitutional, administrative, criminal,
and quasi-private law Anne Peters; 12. Founding myths, international law
and voting rights in the District of Columbia Siegfried Wiessner; 13. The
tormented relationship between international law and EU law Jan Wouters;
14. International law scholarship in times of dictatorship and democracy -
exemplified by the life and work of Wilhelm Wengler Andreas Zimmermann;
Part II. Transnational Economic Law: 15. Sovereignty-plus in the era of
interdependence: toward an international convention on combating human
rights violations by transnational corporations Olivier De Schutter; 16.
The noisy secrecy: Swiss banking law in international dispute Jean Nicolas
Druey; 17. Not-for-profit organisations, conflicts of laws, and the right
of establishment under the EC treaty Werner Ebke; 18. The meaning of
'investment' in the ICSID convention Barton Legum and Caline Mouawad; 19.
Toward a proper perspective of the private company's distinctiveness George
Nnona; 20. Administrative law and international law: the encounter of an
odd couple Hernán Pérez Loose; 21. Making transnational law a reality
through regime-building: the case of international investment law Jeswald
Salacuse; 22. Creditor protection in international law Michael Waibel; 23.
Stability, integration, and political modalities: some American reflections
on the European project after the financial crisis David Westbrook; Part
III. Transnational Lawyering and Dispute Resolution: 24. Diffusion of law:
the world court as a court of transnational justice Pieter Bekker; 25.
Regulating counsel conduct before international arbitral tribunals Charles
Brower and Stephan Schill; 26. International arbitrators as equity judges
Jan Dalhuisen; 27. Customary international law in United States courts: the
origins of the later-in-time rule William Dodge; 28. Mediation and civil
justice: a public-private partnership? Peter Murray; 29. The borders of
bias: rectitude in international arbitration William Park; 30. Managing
conflicts between rulings of the WTO and regional trade tribunals:
reflections on the Brazil-Tyres case Julia Ya Qin; 31. Cross-border
bankruptcy as a model for the regulation of international attorneys
Catherine Rogers.
Introduction. A festschrift to celebrate Detlev Vagts' contributions to
transnational law Pieter Bekker, Rudolf Dolzer and Michael Waibel; 2.
Detlev Vagts and the Harvard Law School William Alford; 3. Constructing and
developing transnational law: the contribution of Detlev Vagts Henry
Steiner; Part I. International Law in General: 4. 'Hegemonic international
law' in retrospect Anthony Anghie; 5. Textual interpretation and
(international) law reading: the myth of (in) determinacy and the genealogy
of meaning Andrea Bianchi; 6. The changing role of the State in the
globalizing world economy Jost Delbrück; 7. Sources of human rights
obligations binding the UN Security Council Bardo Fassbender; 8. Is
transnational law eclipsing international law? Daniel Kalderimis; 9.
Participation in WTO and foreign direct investment - national or community
competences Juliane Kokott; 10. From dualism to pluralism: the relationship
between international law, European law and domestic law Andreas Paulus;
11. Transnational law comprises constitutional, administrative, criminal,
and quasi-private law Anne Peters; 12. Founding myths, international law
and voting rights in the District of Columbia Siegfried Wiessner; 13. The
tormented relationship between international law and EU law Jan Wouters;
14. International law scholarship in times of dictatorship and democracy -
exemplified by the life and work of Wilhelm Wengler Andreas Zimmermann;
Part II. Transnational Economic Law: 15. Sovereignty-plus in the era of
interdependence: toward an international convention on combating human
rights violations by transnational corporations Olivier De Schutter; 16.
The noisy secrecy: Swiss banking law in international dispute Jean Nicolas
Druey; 17. Not-for-profit organisations, conflicts of laws, and the right
of establishment under the EC treaty Werner Ebke; 18. The meaning of
'investment' in the ICSID convention Barton Legum and Caline Mouawad; 19.
Toward a proper perspective of the private company's distinctiveness George
Nnona; 20. Administrative law and international law: the encounter of an
odd couple Hernán Pérez Loose; 21. Making transnational law a reality
through regime-building: the case of international investment law Jeswald
Salacuse; 22. Creditor protection in international law Michael Waibel; 23.
Stability, integration, and political modalities: some American reflections
on the European project after the financial crisis David Westbrook; Part
III. Transnational Lawyering and Dispute Resolution: 24. Diffusion of law:
the world court as a court of transnational justice Pieter Bekker; 25.
Regulating counsel conduct before international arbitral tribunals Charles
Brower and Stephan Schill; 26. International arbitrators as equity judges
Jan Dalhuisen; 27. Customary international law in United States courts: the
origins of the later-in-time rule William Dodge; 28. Mediation and civil
justice: a public-private partnership? Peter Murray; 29. The borders of
bias: rectitude in international arbitration William Park; 30. Managing
conflicts between rulings of the WTO and regional trade tribunals:
reflections on the Brazil-Tyres case Julia Ya Qin; 31. Cross-border
bankruptcy as a model for the regulation of international attorneys
Catherine Rogers.