Jurisprudence for an interconnected globe
著者
書誌事項
Jurisprudence for an interconnected globe
Ashgate, c2003
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注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book explores the interaction of globalization and the development of law. The framework of the book is established by William Twining, who asks how legal concepts can be generalised within a variety of legal orders. This theme is taken up by a group of leading Australian scholars, who produce essays on international economic law, including financial regulation and human rights, and citizenship, migration and crime, under the headings Globalization and the Laws of Money, Globalization and the Laws of People, Globalization, Cultures and Comparisons. This collection marks a step towards the construction of a jurisprudence for a connected, but still culturally diverse, globe.
目次
- New directions for jurisprudence, Catherine Dauvergne
- Part 1 Key themes in jurisprudence for an interconnected globe: the province of jurisprudence re-examined, William Twining, historical aspects of globalization and law, David B. Goldman. Part II Globalization and the laws of money: globalization and international economic law, Sundhya Pahuja, networks - norms and the nation state - thoughts on pluralism and globalized securities regulation, Dimity Kingsford Smith. Part III Globalization and the laws of the people: relabelling the international labour problem - globalization and ideology, Jill Murray, globalization and citizenship and nationality, Kim Rubenstein, illegal migration and sovereignty, Catherine Dauvergne. Part IV Globalization - cultures and comparisons: globalization - legal transplants and unhappiness - post-communist experiences, Adam Czarnota, crime - terror and transitional cultures in a contracting globe, Mark Findlay.
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