Response to Richard Stewart, "Remedying Disregard in Global Regulatory Governance" release_6wd4bmd2pbfojm5bgu6rlonsdu

by David Zaring

Published in AJIL Unbound by Cambridge University Press (CUP).

2014   Volume 108, p145-147

Abstract

The globalization of administration is the most interesting thing happening in both administrative and international law. Richard Stewart's article in the April 2014 issue of the <jats:italic>American Journal of International Law</jats:italic> is a brilliant tour of the horizon of the problems and prospects of this sort of lawmaking. It reflects the work he has done, along with Benedict Kingsbury, as a member of the Global Administrative Law (GAL) Project, housed at New York University Law School and joined by academics all over the world. I am a GAL fellow traveler, if not a paid member, and so I found the paper necessary. Global coordination is setting the standards for national administration in a vast array of issue areas, and surely is the most vibrant and rapidly developing form of international governance. It needs both organization and problematizing, and in this article, Stewart offers both.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   118.0 kB
file_5srvoor4cnhbtjnhe75ily6awu
www.cambridge.org (web)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Year   2014
Language   en ?
Container Metadata
Open Access Publication
In DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  2398-7723
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: c4e5fbd4-9e8b-4a6b-82a7-5b0614aaf754
API URL: JSON