ABSTRACT
This title was first published in 2003.This book explores the interaction of globalization and the development of law. The framework of the book is established by William Twining, who asks how legal concepts can be generalised within a variety of legal orders. This theme is taken up by a group of leading Australian scholars, who produce essays on international economic law, including financial regulation and human rights, and citizenship, migration and crime, under the headings Globalization and the Laws of Money, Globalization and the Laws of People, Globalization, Cultures and Comparisons. This collection marks an important step towards the construction of a jurisprudence for a connected, but still culturally diverse, globe.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|58 pages
Key Themes in Jurisprudence For An Interconnected Globe
part II|56 pages
Globalization and The Laws Of Money
part III|83 pages
Globalization and the Laws of People
part IV|37 pages
Globalization, Cultures and Comparisons