Legal Yardsticks: International Financial Institutions as Diagnosticians and Designers of the Laws of Nations
In: Governance by Indicators, S. 180-216
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In: Governance by Indicators, S. 180-216
In: Center on Law and Globalization Research Paper No. 11-08
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Working paper
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Working paper
In: Socio-economic review, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 385-390
ISSN: 1475-1461
In this response to John Campbell, Glenn Morgan and Gregory Shaffer's comments as part of a symposium on Terence C. Halliday and Bruce G. Carruthers' book, Bankrupt: Global Lawmaking and Systemic Financial Crisis, Halliday offers a further explication of the scope of the recursivity of law as an explanatory framework for the analysis of globalization, law and markets. Adapted from the source document.
In: Law and Social Inquiry, Forthcoming
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In: Annual Review of Law and Social Science, Forthcoming
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In: Law & Society Review 45(4): 831-865.
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In: Asian journal of law and society, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 79-97
ISSN: 2052-9023
AbstractThe Chinese judicial system has long been influenced by a populist legal ideology that prioritizes public accountability and political legitimacy over professional autonomy. In recent years, however, the Chinese legal profession has begun to mobilize collectively, albeit episodically, to challenge this populism. Drawing on legal documents, interviews, media reports, and online discussions, this paper provides a scholarly analysis of the Li Zhuang case in 2009−11, in which the fate of an individual criminal defence lawyer was linked with the main ideological conflict in China's legal system and the highest-level political struggles in the Chinese state. It demonstrates that, although populism remains an intimidating force in China's judicial practice, lawyers, scholars, and other legal professionals may be laying a foundation for collective solidarity to pursue professionalism through their mobilization against populism.
In: Asian Journal of Law and Society, Band 1, S. 79-97
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In: Regulation & governance, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 279-298
ISSN: 1748-5991
AbstractWho governs in the international organizations (IOs) that promulgate global norms on trade and commercial law? Using a new analytic approach, this paper focuses on previously invisible attributes of a global legislature – the state and non‐state delegations and delegates that create universal norms for international trade and commercial law through the most prominent trade law legislature, the UN Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL). Based on ten years of fieldwork, extensive interviews, and unique data on delegation and delegate attendance and participation in UNCITRAL's Working Group on Insolvency, we find that the inner core of global trade lawmakers at UNCITRAL represent a tiny and unrepresentative subset of state and non‐state actors. This disjunction between UNCITRAL's public face, which accords with a global norm of democratic governance, and its private face, where dominant states and private interests prevail, raises fundamental questions about legitimacy and efficacy of representation in global lawmaking.
In: Center on Law and Globalization Research Paper No. 11-06
SSRN
Working paper
In: Socio-economic review, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 77-112
ISSN: 1475-147X
This paper focuses on a largely neglected aspect of legitimation in international organizations (IOs)-the rhetorical work done by IO scripts as a legitimation strategy of IOs. Based on extensive research within regional and global IOs, we demonstrate four aspects of rhetorical legitimation. First, IO texts draw upon a finite repertoire of rhetorical devices (a) to propagate legitimation strengths of an IO, (b) to amplify or compensate for legitimation weaknesses and (c) to express rhetorical repertoires which convey their own intrinsic merits. Second, configurations of rhetorical devices in IO texts are affected by temporal contexts, such as exogenous shocks and the historical sequencing of IO norm production. Third, the negotiation of relations of IO interdependency including competition and cooperation, are partly signaled and managed through the rhetorical repertoires of IO products. Fourth, texts have their own properties, formal and substantive, that are crafted to persuade domestic law-makers. Adapted from the source document.