Theorising the Global Legal Order
By (Author) Andrew Halpin
Edited by Volker Roeben
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
30th September 2009
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Public international law
341.21
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 14mm
This book aims to capture an exploratory approach to theorising the global legal order. Avoiding any brand loyalty to a particular academic perspective, it brings together scholars who contribute a variety of insights covering quite different topics and viewpoints. It sets itself the target of producing a distinctively legal theory of global phenomena, which is capable of illuminating the path of law as an academic discipline, as it confronts a bewildering array of novel situations and innovative ways of thinking about law. The broad base of perspectives found among the contributors, combined with a helpful commentary from the editors, makes the book an ideal Reader to introduce a subject that is becoming of increasing importance for academics, students and practitioners, in law and related fields.
...the chapters, taken together...provide some throughtful and stimulating insights into how the global order might best be understood, and into the difficulties of joining those insights into a coherent understanding of its character. ...this book provides the reader with an introduction to theories of global law, injects case studies that cast light on the processes through which it may develop, and engages periodically in helpful critiques of the notion of a global legal order and its mechanisms. Spencer Zifcak Law and Politics Book Review April 2011
Andrew Halpin is Head of School and Professor of Legal Theory at Swansea University School of Law. Volker Roeben is Professor of Public International Law at Swansea University School of Law.