Arbitration / Mediation / Litigation

Transnational Legality Stateless Law and International Arbitration

By Thomas Schultz
Oxford University Press January 2014

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199641956
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
January 2014
Format
Hardback , 224 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • Uniquely aligns the theoretical debate on what we should call law with more practical debates on the nature of arbitration
  • Offers original, controversial arguments on what law without the state may be
  • Sets out an essential framework of conditions necessary for international arbitration to legitimately count as law

What should we call law when it is not the law of one or several states? Does it actually matter what we call law? How can we take into account the consequences of calling something law when we shape the concept of law in the first place? How does international arbitration help to illustrate the problem? 

This book is an investigation into stateless law, illustrated by international arbitration regimes. It addresses key philosophical questions posed by international arbitration as a potential path to law beyond the state. It ascertains which dimensions of transnational legality arbitral regimes conform to, and what consequences follow from it. 

The argument of this book is firmly rooted in contemporary legal positivism and is attentive to current debates regarding the rule of law to ponder legality without territory. A theory is suggested regarding the minimal conditions that transnational regimes must fulfil in order to legitimately and appropriately count as law. The theory is tested on various arbitral regimes. The book thus offers reflections on the extent to which legality and the rule of law can serve as a moral and political benchmark for transnational regimes, to assess the political morality of arbitration's current autonomy from states and what arbitration's claim for an increase in that autonomy implies.

 

Readership: Scholars and students studying international arbitration, international dispute settlement, and the theory of international law; legal practitioners working in international arbitration

Table of Contents

Introduction
Prelude
1: The Importance of Law
2: The Minimal Conditions of Non-State Law
3: Arbitration Regimes as Legal Systems
Conclusion

About the Author

Thomas Schultz is a Swiss National Science Foundation Fellow in the International Law Department of the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies. He has worked in the fields of international dispute settlement, private international law, public international law, jurisprudence, and technology law. In 2010, he received the Prix Jubilé of the Swiss Academy of Humanities and Social Sciences. He is founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement (OUP).

HKD 1,513.20 −3%
HKD 1,560.00

Inclusive of HK delivery

Ready to ship
Delivery Time: around 4 weeks
Extra 2-10 working days if shipping address outside Hong Kong
  • Free HK shipping over HK$1,000
  • International shipping to 35+ countries
Order Form
Save

Recommended

You may also be interested in these books:

More titles from Arbitration / Mediation / Litigation

View all