Experts, Networks and International Law
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 8/16/2018
EAN 9781316635636, ISBN10: 1316635635
Paperback, 318 pages, 23 x 15.3 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
Highlighting how the challenges raised by globalization - from environmental management to financial sector meltdowns - have encouraged the emergence of experts and networks as powerful actors in international governance, the contributions in this collection assess the methods and effectiveness of these new actors. Unlike other books that have focused on networks or experts, this volume brings these players together, showing how they interact and share the challenges of establishing legitimacy and justifying their power and influence. The collection shows how experts and networks function in different ways to address diverse problems across multiple borders. The reader is provided with a broader and deeper practical understanding of how informal authority actually operates, and of the nature of the relationship between different actors involved in policymaking. Through a range of case studies, the contributions in this collection explain how globalization is reshaping traditional forms of power and authority.
Preface Anne Orford
1. Experts, networks and international law Holly Cullen, Joanna Harrington and Catherine Renshaw
Part I. Experts, Networks, Advocacy and Mediation
2. Networks of protection Suzanne Akila
3. Advancing the conversation
non-judicial voices and the transnational judicial dialogue Pammela Quinn Saunders
4. International peace mediators
the normative involvement of an epistemic community Philipp Kastner
Part II. Experts, Networks and International Environmental Law
5. Multilateral environmental agreements and regional fisheries management organisations
experts, networks and global administrative law principles Josephine Toop
6. Institutional expertise
reconsidering the role of scientific experts in the international conservation and management of cetaceans Cameron S. G. Jefferies
7. Engaging complexity
legalising international arctic environmental governance Tahnee Prior
8. Environmental government networks with Asian examples Hitomi Kimura
Part III. Experts, Networks and Institutional Change
9. Non-binding instruments and democratic accountability Cecily Rose
10. Traditional and modern designs for an international law of sovereign debt restructuring
a way forward Kei Nakajima
11. The fight against impunity for core international crimes
reflections on the contribution of networked experts to a regime of aggravated state responsibility Masahiro Kurosaki.