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Globalizing Justice

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Globalizing Justice Synopsis

Globalization is a far-reaching and multifaceted phenomenon whose effects on law are just beginning to be appreciated fully. Globalizing Justice examines the effects of globalization on law and court systems in the developed and developing worlds. How has the global spread of legal norms changed the relationship between international, supranational, and national courts? How are transnational and international legal norms transmitted and received? The contributors utilize a variety of approaches-historical, comparative, normative, and empirical-to expose the extensive effects of globalization in areas such as human rights, universal criminal jurisdiction, citizenship, and national sovereignty. This volume sheds light on the global spread of information and the cross-border migration of legal ideas across the world to further open up the discussion of globalization in the social sciences.

Donald W. Jackson is Herman Brown Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University and the author of Even the Children of Strangers: Equality under the U.S. Constitution. Michael C. Tolley is Associate Professor of Political Science at Northeastern University and the coauthor (with Christopher J. Bosso and John H. Portz) of American Government: Conflict, Compromise, and Citizenship. Mary L. Volcansek is Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University and the author of Constitutional Politics in Italy: The Constitutional Court.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781438430706
Publication date:
Author: Donald Wilson Jackson, Michael Carlton Tolley, Mary L Volcansek
Publisher: SUNY Press an imprint of State University of New York Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 293 pages
Series: SUNY Series in the Foundations of the Democratic State
Genres: Globalization
Political structures: democracy
Human rights, civil rights
Central / national / federal government
International relations