New Perspectives on the Divide Between National and International Law
André Nollkaemper editor Janne E Nijman editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Nov '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book aims to contribute to our understanding of one of the most pressing issues of modern international law: the relationship between the international legal order on the one hand and the domestic legal orders of over 190 sovereign states on the other hand The traditional and dominant understanding of this relationship is that there exists a strict separation between the international legal order and domestic legal orders. Processes of legal globalisation and internationalisation have made this relationship much more complex. Legal authority has shifted away from the state in both vertical and horizontal directions. Forced by the pressures of interdependence, states have allowed international bodies to oversee and sometimes even implement and enforce domestic legislation. At the same time, private persons are more and more drawn into an internationalized order. Increasing cross-border flows of services, goods and capital, mobility, and communication have further undermined any stable notion of what is national and what is international. This book offers several partly complementary and partly competing perspectives that allow us understand and make sense of the complex interaction between the international and domestic sphere.
The book...ranks among the fundamental literature on the subject-matter, and makes the book a revealing and instructive reading for students and scholars alike. * Mateja Steinbruck Platise, Heidelberg Journal of International Law 69, 2009 *
ISBN: 9780199231942
Dimensions: 242mm x 165mm x 28mm
Weight: 766g
406 pages