ABSTRACT

Demonstrating the crucial role that private international law and legality has played and continues to play in shaping globalization, this book argues that the rules, institutions, and actors that make up the practice of private international law have been critical in translating political and economic power into legal regimes that have facilitated the processes of globalization.

These processes depend on two fundamental types of socio-political action – the legal structuring of emerging transnational spaces and flows of goods, capital, and finance, and the legal-political reconfiguration of state power and priorities to facilitate the growth of these spaces and their penetration into national political-economic-and social spaces. While a variety of processes were involved in these forms of action, the material practices of private international law played a central role in this project of political economic reconstruction.

Offering a theory of private international legality as a practice that intersects with and provides a vehicle for the mobilization of political and economic power, this book examines the construction and enrolment of private law expertise and the structural condition of pluralism in the global political economy to argue that private international law has helped construct a global political economy responsive to the priorities of powerful actors and resistant to the demands and interests of the rest of the world’s populations. It will be of interest to academics and students exploring the relationship between law, international political economy and the nature of state power.

part One|69 pages

Theoretical Foundations

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

Private Law in a World of Globalization

chapter 3|22 pages

Talking Past One Another

Private International Law and International Political Economy

part Two|102 pages

Private Law Technologies and the Construction of Globalization

chapter 4|25 pages

The Technologies of Private International Law I

Contract and Party Autonomy

chapter 5|23 pages

The Technologies of Private International Law II

The Pluralism-Harmonization Dynamic

chapter 6|22 pages

The Technologies of Private International Law III

International Commercial Arbitration and the Private Settlement of Disputes

chapter 7|30 pages

International Investment Law and Investor-State Arbitration

Incorporating Private Law Technologies into Public Law

part Three|20 pages

Conclusion

chapter 8|18 pages

PIL and Power in the Contemporary Political Economy

Contention Amidst Cooperation