ABSTRACT

The current system of international law is experiencing profound transformations. Indeed, the simultaneous processes of globalization combined with the disintegration of international systems of governance and law-making pose complex challenges for legal scholarship. The doctrinal response to these challenges has been theorized within two seemingly contradictory discourses in international law: fragmentation and constitutionalisation.

This book takes an innovative approach to international law, viewing the processes of the fragmentation and constitutionalisation as being profoundly interconnected and reflective of each other. It brings together a select group of contributors, including both established and emerging scholars and practitioners, in order to explore the ways in which the problems of fragmentation and constitutionalisation are viscerally linked one to the other and thus mutually conditioning and stimulating. The book considers the theory and practice of international law looking at the two phenomena in relation to the various fields of international law such as international criminal law, cultural heritage law and international environmental law.

part |74 pages

Fragmentation of international law as a challenge to its constitutionalisation

part |126 pages

Constitutionalisation through fragmentation

chapter |20 pages

A constitutionalised legal order

Exploring the role of the World Heritage Convention (1972) *

chapter |22 pages

From fragmentation to coherence

A constitutionalist take on the trade and public health debates

chapter |21 pages

Access to environmental justice for NGOs

Interplay between the Aarhus Convention, the EU Lisbon Treaty and the European Convention on Human Rights

chapter |23 pages

The reconciliatory approach

How multilateral environmental agreements can harmonise international legal obligations