Subsidiarity
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:20th Feb '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Subsidiarity concerns how to establish, allocate, or use authority with a rebuttable presumption for the local.
This Element is titled subsidiarity, which is popular in scholarship about international law due to its role in the European Union (EU). It concerns on how to establish, allocate, or use authority within a social or legal order, stating a rebuttable presumption for the local.'Subsidiarity' is vague and contested, yet popular in scholarship about international law due to its role in the European Union (EU). Which conceptions of subsidiarity are more justifiable, and how might they contribute to international law? A principle of subsidiarity concerns how to establish, allocate, or use authority within a social or legal order, stating a rebuttable presumption for the local. Various historical patterns, practices, principles, and justifications offer different recommendations. Seven normative theories vary in how immunity protecting or person promoting they are. The latter appear more justifiable and withstand criticism often raised against subsidiarity. Some conceptions of person promoting subsidiarity serve as a structuring principle for international law and fullfills several criteria of a general principle of law. It can harmonize domestic and international law but is not sufficient to reduce fragmentation among sectors with different objectives.
ISBN: 9781108995238
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 158g
100 pages