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SERIES<br />
THE INTERNATIONAL LIBRARY OF ESSAYS ON GLOBALIZATION AND LAW<br />
Series Editor: Michael K. Addo, University of Exeter, UK<br />
Economic globalization has so fundamentally affected the roles and relationships of national and international actors that conventional rules of law have come<br />
under intense scrutiny. With economic globalization comes the confirmation of neo-classical economic doctrine as a dominant theme in policy-making and with<br />
it the diminution of the State and other symbols of sovereignty. The International Library of Essays on Globalization and Law includes thematic collections of essays<br />
which discuss changes to the role and the relevance of the law which are a consequence of and response to economic globalization.<br />
For more information on this series, including a full list of titles, contents listings and more, please visit www.ashgate.com/legalreference<br />
FORTHCOMING<br />
Globalization and International Organizations<br />
Edited by Edward Kwakwa, World Intellectual Property Organization, Switzerland<br />
The International Library of Essays on Globalization and Law<br />
In the context of today’s ever-increasing globalization the traditional role<br />
of international organizations has changed in recent years from that of facilitator<br />
of the activities of their members, to that of director of their own activities.<br />
This collection brings together the best published work by leading authorities<br />
in the field on issues that are affected by this change of role, such as governance,<br />
control, accountability and the privileges of international organizations.<br />
Contents:<br />
INTRODUCTION:<br />
PART I: GENERAL AND CONCEPTUAL ISSUES:<br />
International organizations: Then and now, Jose Alvarez;<br />
The law of international organizations: A subject which needs exploration<br />
and analysis, C.F. Amerasinghe;<br />
International institutions today: An imperial global state in the making, B.S. Chimni.<br />
PART II: GOVERNANCE, CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM AND ACCOUNTABILITY:<br />
Governance and accountability: The regional development banks, Enrique Carrasco,<br />
Wesley Carrington and Hee Jin Lee;<br />
Representation and power in international organization: The operational constitution<br />
and its critics, Jacob Katz Cogan;<br />
Constitutionalism Lite, Jan Klabbers;<br />
The Bustani case before the ILOAT: Constitutionalism in disguise?, Jan Klabbers.<br />
PART III: PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES:<br />
Privileges and immunities of United Nations officials, Anthony Miller;<br />
In the shadow of Waite and Kennedy – The jurisdictional immunity of international<br />
organizations, the individual’s right of access to courts and administrative tribunals<br />
as an alternative means of dispute settlement, August Reinisch and Ulf Andreas Weber.<br />
PART IV: NORM-MAKING:<br />
Law-making through the operational activities of international organizations,<br />
Ian Johnstone;<br />
Some comments on rule-making at the World Intellectual Property Organization,<br />
Edward Kwakwa.<br />
PART V: DEVELOPMENT:<br />
The World Intellectual Property Organization and the development agenda,<br />
Christopher May;<br />
International trade for development: The WTO as a development institution?,<br />
Asif Qureshi;<br />
The WTO, global governance and development, Supachai Panitchpakdi;<br />
NAME INDEX.<br />
Includes 14 previously published journal articles<br />
August 2011 c. 500 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2735-7 c. £140.00<br />
ALSO OF INTEREST…<br />
Global Law<br />
Edited by John J. Kirton with Jelena Madunic, both at University of Toronto, Canada<br />
The Library of Essays in Global Governance<br />
This volume assembles the key articles that have defined the scholarly field of global<br />
law, ranging from papers about customs, treaties and international institutions to the<br />
roles they have played in international relations and the effect they have had and will<br />
continue to have on the international system.<br />
Includes 21 previously published journal articles<br />
2009 546 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2662-6 £150.00<br />
International Law and Politics<br />
Edited by Joel Trachtman, Tufts University, USA<br />
The Library of Essays in International Relations<br />
Includes 20 previously published journal articles<br />
2008 632 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2766-1 £165.00<br />
International Law, Volumes I and II<br />
Edited by Malcolm Evans and Patrick Capps, both at University of Bristol, UK<br />
The International Library of Essays in Law and Legal Theory (Second Series)<br />
These companion volumes bring together key writings which both illustrate<br />
and exemplify ideas that have informed the historical development of the<br />
discipline of international law.<br />
Includes 26 previously published journal articles in 2 volumes<br />
2009 1206 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2736-4 £300.00<br />
NEW<br />
Globalization of Criminal Justice<br />
Edited by Michael Bohlander, Durham University, UK<br />
The International Library of Essays on Globalization and Law<br />
This collection of essays evaluates the effectiveness of the<br />
process to create an international mechanism for establishing<br />
criminal accountability, as happened when the international<br />
legal community came together in 1998 to sign the Rome<br />
Statute. The articles show the importance of comparative<br />
criminal law research to the development of international<br />
criminal justice, as well as the foundations, substantive and<br />
procedural aspects of international criminal law.<br />
Contents:<br />
INTRODUCTION:<br />
PART I: COMPARATIVE CRIMINAL LAW: HARMONIC CONVERGENCE?<br />
Constitutional criminal procedure in an international Context, Diane Marie Amann;<br />
The use of domestic sources as a basis for international criminal law principles,<br />
Michael Bohlander and Mark Findlay;<br />
The Iranian criminal justice under the Islamization project, Hassan Rezaei;<br />
Codifying Shari’a: International norms, legality and the freedom to invent<br />
new forms, Paul H. Robinson, Adnan Zulfiqar, Margaret Kammerud,<br />
Michael Orchowski, Elizabeth A. Gerlach, Adam L. Pollock, Thomas M. O’Brien,<br />
John C. Lin, Tom Stenson, Negar Katirai, J. John Lee and Marc Aaron Melzer;<br />
Traversing the rocky road of law reform in conflict and post conflict states: model<br />
codes for post conflict criminal justice as a tool of assistance, Vivienne O’Connor.<br />
PART II: INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW:<br />
FOUNDATIONS:<br />
The philosophy and policy of international criminal justice, M. Cherif Bassiouni;<br />
Global criminal justice: an idea whose time has passed, Jeremy Rabkin;<br />
Arab and Islamic Shari’a perspectives on the current system of international<br />
criminal justice, Adel Maged;<br />
SUBSTANTIVE:<br />
The expressive capacity of international punishment: the limits of the national<br />
law analogy and the potential of international criminal law, Robert D. Sloane;<br />
Drawing the boundaries of mens rea in the jurisprudence of the International<br />
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Mohamed Elewa Badar;<br />
Prosecutor v. Dusko Tadic: Waiting to exhale, Michael Bohlander;<br />
Genuine consent to sexual violence under international law, Wolfgang Schomburg<br />
and Ines Petersen;<br />
PROCEDURAL:<br />
The structure of international criminal procedure: ‘Adversarial’, ‘inquisitorial’<br />
or ‘mixed’, Kai Ambos;<br />
The trial proceedings before the ICC, Stefan Kirsch;<br />
International criminal tribunals and their power to punish contempt and false<br />
testimony, Michael Bohlander;<br />
NAME INDEX.<br />
Includes 15 previously published journal articles<br />
August 2010 624 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2865-1 £170.00<br />
NEW<br />
International Law in East Asia<br />
Edited by Zou Keyuan, University of Central Lancashire, UK<br />
and Jianfu Chen, La Trobe University, Australia<br />
The Library of Essays on Law in East Asia<br />
The development of international law has been influenced by the rise of Asian<br />
countries, and the increased influence of other countries in the region through<br />
multinational organizations such as ASEAN. This collection of previously published<br />
articles by leading East Asian scholars brings together Asian perspectives concerning<br />
various issues in international law and provides a comprehensive picture of how and<br />
why East Asian countries participate in international law.<br />
Contributors: Zou Keyuan, Jianfu Chen, Sompong Sucharitkul, Yosibro Matsui,<br />
Jiangyu Wang, Tien Quang Tran, Keisuke Iida, Sun Shiyan, Zou Keyuan,<br />
Hasjim Djalal, Nguyen Hong Thao, Tanaka Tosbiyuki, Bing Bing Jia, Masahiko Asada,<br />
Eric Yong-Joong Lee, Hisashi Owada, C.L. Lim.<br />
Includes 17 previously published journal articles<br />
May 2011 c. 506 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2873-6 c. £140.00<br />
INTERNATIONAL LAW<br />
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