Part I: Visions of Postnational Law
1: Postnational Law in Search of a Structure
2: The Promise and Perils of Postnational Constitutionalism
3: The Case for Pluralism
Part II: Pluralism in Postnational Practice
4: The Open Architecture of European Human Rights Law
5: Sanctions and Rights between Hierarchy and Heterarchy
6: Pluralism in Postnational Risk Regulation
Part III: Pluralism's Virtues (and Vices)
7: Cooperation and Power in a Pluralist World
8: Pluralist Challenges
9: Conclusions: Postnational Pluralism and Beyond
Nico Krisch is a Professor of International Law at the Hertie
School of Governance in Berlin, where he moved in 2009 after being
a Senoat the Law Department of the London School of Economics and
Political Science. Previously, he held research positions at Merton
College, Oxford, NYU Law School and the Max Planck Institute for
International Law in Heidelberg. He is the author of
Selbstverteidigung und kollektive Sicherheit (Self-defense and
Collective Security,
2001), a co-editor of The Emergence of Global Administrative Law
(Law & Contemporary Problems, 2005), and of articles on United
Nations law, on hegemony in international law, and on the legal
order of
global governance. He is also a member of the Executive Board of
the European Society of International Law.
`Reviewing this book has been an enormously edifying
experience...[The] book...explores important ideas and suggests new
ways forward.'
Modern Law Review
`Nico Krisch has written one of the most lucid and circumspect
contributions, which is likely to show significant repercussions in
the field...In sum, Nico Krisch has written a truly wonderful
book.'
Ingo Venzke, International Law and Politics
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