International institutions Part 5

International institutions Part 5

 

43

Paving the Road to Legitimacy for CDM Institutions and Procedures: Learning from Other Experiences in International Environmental Governance
Francesca Romanin Jacur
Carbon & Climate Law Review
2009, Number 1 p.69

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44

Becker, P. & Wetzell R. F. (eds.), Criminals and their Scientists: the History of Criminology in International Perspective; Bellany, Alastair, The Politics of Court Scandal in Early Modern England News Culture and the Overbury Affair 1603-1660; Holzman-Gazit, Yifat, Land Expropriation in Israel; Kennedy, David, Of Law and War; Okafor, Obiora Chinedu, The African Human Rights System: activist forces and International institutions ; Sloth-Nielsen, Julia (Ed.), Children’s Rights in Africa, A Legal Perspective; Xanthaki, Alexandra, Indigenous Rights and United Nations Standards; Ziccardi Capaldo, Giuliana, The Pillars of Global Law; Armstrong, D. & Farrell, T. & H. Lambert, International Law and International Relations, and Simmons, B. A. & Steinberg, R. H. (eds), International Law and International Relations
Cambrian Law Review
Volume 39, 2008 p.95

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45

International Institutions and Transnational Advocacy : The Case of the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation
Ruth Buchanan and Rusby Chaparro
UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs
Volume 13, Number 1, Spring 2008 p.129

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46

Global Leadership for the 21st Century: A Strategy for the New American President
HOLLY BENNER
Fletcher Forum of World Affairs
Volume 33, Number 1, Winter/Spring 2009 p.91

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The moment is ripe for the United States, and President Obama in particular, to redefine American leadership for the twenty-first century. The global financial crisis has brought the reality of global interconnectedness close to home and highlighted weaknesses in the international institutions mandated to prevent such crises from unfolding. Furthermore, there is growing convergence around the challenges posed by transnational threats. Both within the United States and abroad, President Obama faces soaring expectations, but he also benefits from effusive good will that can provide him a window to restore America’s global credibility.

47

The moral quality of work in international economic institutions: resisting complacency
Maksymilian Del Mar and Oche Onazi
International Journal of Law in Context
Volume 4, Issue 4, December 2008 p.337-372

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48

New U.S. National Defense Strategy Warns of Weak and Failing States, Emphasizes Alliances, Decries U.S. Opponents’ Resort to International Law and Institutions
American Journal of International Law
Volume 103, Number 1, January 2009 p.142

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49

Why International Institutions Matter in the Global Credit Crisis
Tony Porter
Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations
Volume 15, Number 1, January-March 2009 p.3

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50

ECONOMIC RECONSTRUCTION OF WAR-TORN COUNTRIES: THE ROLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Graciana del Castillo
Seton Hall Law Review
Volume 38, Number 4, 2008 p.1265

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51

The Future of International Antitrust and Improving Antitrust Agency Capacity
D. Daniel Sokol
Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy
2008

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One of the key issues in international antitrust has been how to make antitrust effective around the world. Most antitrust laws have been adopted or significantly modified since 1990. A number of key jurisdictions are either fairly new to antitrust altogether or to an antitrust regime that effectively employs the latest in economic thinking and the legal tools necessary to promote competition. Jurisdictions that have made antitrust a new and important cornerstone to economic policy include Brazil, Russia, India, and China. Because of the stakes involved in the ability of antitrust to foster economic development and to prevent misguided antitrust policy from operating as a regulatory tax, it is critical that the future of antitrust focus on improved capacity around the world. By capacity, I mean the ability of a given agency to undertake well reasoned and effective decisionmaking in the implementation of antitrust policy. There are two concerns for countries in various stages of antitrust development: harmonization of domestic antitrust with international antitrust “best practices,”and implementation of an effective antitrust regime. In an effort to solve these issues, policymakers in antitrust emphasize two dynamics to shape the development of increased capacity of younger antitrust regimes. The first is international antitrust institutions, such as the International Competition Network, that develop antitrust norms. The other is technical assistance, either from these international antitrust institutions or directly from more developed antitrust agencies or other aid providers. By technical assistance, I mean the process through which agencies improve their capacity to undertake competition policy.

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PANEL V: THE LEGITIMACY OE DELEGATING LAWMAKING TO INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS: THE International Court of Justice AND FOREIGN NATIONALS ON DEATH ROW IN THE U.S.
Fordham Law Review
Volume 77, Number 2, November 2008

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53

The Role of Constitutional Principles in Protecting International Peace and Security Through International, Supranational and National Legal Institutions
David Feldman
New Zealand Journal of Public and International Law
Volume 6, Number 1, June 2008 p.1

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54

MOVING TOWARDS OR TURNING AWAY FROM INSTITUTIONS? THE FUTURE OF International Organizations IN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC
ALISON DUXBURY
Singapore Year Book of International Law
Volume 11, 2007 p.177

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55

Special Issue: The Exercise of Public Authority by International Institutions – Special Issue Editors: Armin von Bogdandy, Rüdiger Wolfrum, Jochen von Bernstorff, Philipp Dann & Matthias Goldmann
German Law Journal
Volume 9, Number 11, November 2008

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56

Anti-money laundering by international institutions: a preliminary assessment
Marco Arnone and Pier Carlo Padoan
European Journal of Law and Economics
Volume 26, Number 3, December 2008 p.361-386

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Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

Advocacy, International Court of Justice, International Organizations, International institutions, Learning.


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