Beschreibung
The book is devoted to the effects of globalisation and global governance on the state, law and society. It provides a multidiscoursive analysis that challenges the traditional constitutional and political concepts with view to their structural and functional changes produced by the emergence of supranational constitutionalism and decision making.
Autorenportrait
Martin Belov is Senior Assistant Professor in Constitutional and Comparative Constitutional Law at the University of Sofia «St. Kliment Ohridski», Faculty of Law.
Inhalt
Contents: Saskia Sassen: The Savage Sorting: Emergent Predatory Logics – Martin Belov: Globalisation, Crisis of Territoriality, and their Effects on the Constitutional Principles – Mate Paksy: Justice, Territory, and National Minorities: Critical Assessments – Michele Saporiti: The Concept of Sovereignty and the Transnational Challenge of Global Religions. A Theoretical Framework – Anna Kalisz/Monika Zalewska: Hans Kelsen in a Multicentric (Legal) World – Aleksander Tsekov: The Constitutional Identity of the EU Member States as a Legal Limit to the Constitutionalisation of the European Integration – Christoph Good: Corporate Human Rights Initiatives - From International Law to Global Governance and Back? – Axelle Reiter: State Responsibility for Private Breaches of International Law and the Horizontal Application of Human Rights – Miklós Könczöl: Future-Related Interests: What and How to Represent? – Szilárd Tattay: Making Sense of a Nonsense: Representation of the «Rights» of Future Generations – Uroš Zdravkovi?: Coverage and Application of the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism – Adam Szot: The Influence of European Court of Human Rights’ Jurisprudence on Public Administration Governance Processes.