archive

Cosmopolitanism in constitutional law

The inaugural issue of UN Constitutional is out. Mattias Kumm (NYU): Constitutionalism and the Cosmopolitan State. Vlad Perju (BC): Cosmopolitanism in Constitutional Law. From German Law Journal, a special issue on Political Constitutions. Tom Ginsburg (Chicago), and Daniel Rockmore and Nick Foti (Dartmouth): We the Peoples: The Global Origins of Constitutional Preambles (and from OUPblog, a look at ten constitutional preambles you may not know). Tom Ginsburg (Chicago) and Mila Versteeg (Virginia): Why Do Countries Adopt Constitutional Review? Poul F. Kjaer (CBS): Transnational Normative Orders: The Constitutionalism of Intra- and Trans-Normative Law. Lorenzo Casini (Rome): Solidarity between States in the Global Legal Space. Matt Qvortrup (Cranfield): New Development: The Comparative Study of Secession-Referendums. Robert L. Howse (NYU) and Ruti Teitel (NYLS): Humanity Bounded and Unbounded: The Regulation of External Self-Determination Under International Law. Rene Provost (McGill): Interpretation in International Law as a Transcultural Project. John D. Haskell (Mississippi): The Traditions of Modernity within International Law and Governance: Christianity, Liberalism and Marxism. Adam S. Chilton (Chicago) and Dustin H. Tingley (Harvard): Why the Study of International Law Needs Experiments. Tomer Broude (HUJ): Behavioral International Law. Christian J. Tams (Glasgow): The World Court's Role in the International Law-Making Process. The first chapter from The New Terrain of International Law: Courts, Politics, Rights by Karen J. Alter. Timothy Meyer reviews Economic Foundations of International Law by Eric A. Posner and Alan O. Sykes.