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In: Vergleichende Gesellschaftsgeschichte und politische Ideengeschichte der Neuzeit 14
In: Studium und Wissenschaft
World Affairs Online
The internationalization of emerging economies has brought new perspectives to international business development. Focusing on the extensive impact these emerging economies and firms have had, this volume covers the strong players, such as Brazil, Russia, India and China, as well as dynamically developing economies such as Mexico and the Philippines. The contributors review topics such as the role of institutions and resource dependency on outward foreign direct investment from emerging economies, and the role of the global mindset and psychic distance on the performance of subsidiaries of firms originating from emerging economies. It explores new horizons in international business development and addresses challenging perspectives.
After the Second World War, the dissolution of European empires and emergence of 'new states' in Asia, Africa, Oceania, and elsewhere necessitated large-scale structural changes in international legal order. In Completing Humanity, Umut Özsu recounts the history of the struggle to transform international law during the twentieth century's last major wave of decolonization. Commencing in 1960, with the General Assembly's landmark decolonization resolution, and concluding in 1982, with the close of the third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea and the onset of the Latin American debt crisis, the book examines the work of elite international lawyers from newly independent states alongside that of international law specialists from 'First World' and socialist states. A study in modifications to legal theory and doctrine over time, it documents and reassesses post-1945 decolonization from the standpoint of the 'Third World' and the jurists who elaborated and defended its interests
In: Internationale Beziehungen Band 23
This paper outlines the modern trends in the development of the international monetary system in conditions of financial globalization. The paper establishes that the international monetary system has evolved through different stages necessitated by various economic crises at different periodic intervals. It is noted in the paper that despite the inefficiencies in the current dollar denominated international monetary system developed countries are reluctant to do any reforms. However, International monetary system reform is obvious and most likely will happen under the growing crisis in the international financial systems and credit relations. It is proposed that countries look at new innovations that will make international transactions cheaper and less risky. ; peer-reviewed
BASE
In: Serial, No. 106-176
World Affairs Online
In: European journal of international relations, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 257-279
ISSN: 1460-3713
This article offers a critical perspective on one of the central concepts of IR and the English School of IR in particular, namely the concept of international society. It argues that the moral agency of international society and its 'naturalness' were affirmed simultaneously with the marginalization of the concept of societas designating contractual political relations. The article traces the concept of contracted societas back to the work of Hugo Grotius, an acclaimed founder of the 'international society' tradition. By placing Grotius' use of the concept in the context of ancient and early modern discussion of political alliances and partnerships, it demonstrates that politically contracted societas was no less conventional and important than the Stoic universal human society. However, this alternative societas had to be abandoned in the debates over the rival theories of social contract and the law of nations. The inherent sociability arguments, which were used to undermine a Hobbesian explanation for social contract or to question the very idea that society results from contract, found no place for societas contracted for a particular political purpose. The identification of such contingency in the history of the concept provides grounds for reopening the closure of the present conceptualizations of international society. [Reprinted by permission; copyright Sage Publications Ltd. & ECPR-European Consortium for Political Research.]
In: Nicholas Tsgourias and Russell Buchan, eds., Research Handbook on International Law and Cyberspace (2nd edition) (2020 Forthcoming)
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In: Manchester Journal of International Economic Law Volume 17 Issue 2 2020, ISSN 1742-3945 page 266-297
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In: Virendra Ahuja, International Legal Regime on Nuclear Disarmament: Contemporary Developments, 7(1) NLUJ Law Review 142 (2020)
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In: Edward Elgar Research Handbook on the Sociology of International Law (Andrew Lang & Moshe Hirsch eds., 2017). Forthcoming
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Working paper
In: Forthcoming in: Oxford Handbook on the Sources of International Law (Samantha Besson and Jean d'Aspremont eds, OUP 2017)
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In: Annalisa Leibold, The Extraterritorial Application of the FCPA Under International Law, 51 Willamette L. Rev. 225 (2015)
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In: Sprawy międzynarodowe, Band 65, Heft 3, S. 81-97
ISSN: 0038-853X