"International Organization in the Age of Globalization examines how the relentless process of globalization has affected the world's international organizations. Taylor primarily focuses on the United Nations and the wider UN system, but he also examines the involvement of the WTO, the World Bank and regional organizations such as the EU, ASEAN, ASEM, NAFTA, and MERCOSUR in these processes. This wide ranging study concentrates on three key areas--the maintenance of peace and security, the management of economic and social activity, and the protection of individual welfare--which provide illustrations of the changing relationship between international organizations and individual states, a central interaction in global organization. Clearly and provocatively written, this book will be essential for anyone interested in processes of globalization. Students and researchers in international relations, politics, economics and sociology will benefit from the author's insights into the changing nature of international organization in the twenty-first century."--Bloomsbury Publishing.
After concluding that the mid-eighteenth-century colonial legal system usually functioned effectively, this text focuses on constitutional events leading to the American Revolution, showing how lawyers used ideology in the interests of ...
Stubbs has made the attractive suggestion that perhaps the rapid growth of the universities " conduced to the maintenance in the educated class of an ideal of free government, 1 For Henry I, see in general Corbett in Cambridge Mediaeval ...
This volume contains reprints of the lectures delivered in the Selden Society lecture series from 1952 to 2000.
In Asking the Law Question, Margaret Davies provides an up-to-date account of traditional and contemporary legal theory. This edition retains the critical and contemporary focus of the first three editions.
美国驻华大使馆新闻文化处资助翻译出版
Fusing Common Law and Equity: Remedies, Restitution and Reform
Some Lessons from Our Legal History
Summary: Identifies issues of contract law that are uniquely problematic for electronic contracts, including important appellate decisions from common law jurisdictions, such as the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia.
The law of nature -- The common law -- The adoption of written constitutions -- The separation of law and religion -- The explosion in law publishing -- The two-sidedness of natural law -- The decline of natural law and custom --Substitutes ...
This volume reproduces the text of the annual Sir Thomas More Lecture, together with other lectures and talks given in conjunction with it, or throughout the year, as part of the Inn's extensive programme of teaching and training in ...