Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Introduction: How Might We Live? Global Ethics in a New Century
- Individualism and the Concept of Gaia
- Bounded and Cosmopolitan Justice
- Globalization From Above: Actualizing The Ideal Through Law
- A More Perfect Union? The Liberal Peace and the Challenge of Globalization
- International Pluralism and the Rule of Law
- Towards a Feminist International Ethics
- Contested Globalization: The Changing Context and Normative Challenges
- Universalism and Difference in Discourses of Race
- Does Cosmopolitan Thinking Have a Future?
- Individuals, Communities and Human Rights
- Thinking About Civilizations
- Index
International Pluralism and the Rule of Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Introduction: How Might We Live? Global Ethics in a New Century
- Individualism and the Concept of Gaia
- Bounded and Cosmopolitan Justice
- Globalization From Above: Actualizing The Ideal Through Law
- A More Perfect Union? The Liberal Peace and the Challenge of Globalization
- International Pluralism and the Rule of Law
- Towards a Feminist International Ethics
- Contested Globalization: The Changing Context and Normative Challenges
- Universalism and Difference in Discourses of Race
- Does Cosmopolitan Thinking Have a Future?
- Individuals, Communities and Human Rights
- Thinking About Civilizations
- Index
Summary
Does international law have a place in a world being reshaped by globalization? Sceptics argue that international law belongs to a world order, based on relations among sovereign states, that is rapidly receding into history. But such a claim itself invites scepticism. Globalization is a journalist's term—a rough tool for making sense of what appears to be a trend toward a more integrated international economy and its attendant cultural homogenization. Academics who use the term link it to the proliferation of intergovernmental organizations and transnational interest groups concerned with human rights, the environment, or economic issues, and to the emergence of a new normative framework, distinct from classical (‘Westphalian’) international law, for ‘global civil society’ and ‘cosmopolitan democracy’. Whether these trends will continue and how they might affect familiar political arrangements is not yet clear. It is possible that international law will disappear along with the pluralist system of sovereign states that the new global order is said to be replacing. It is more likely, however, that the old system will continue in a new form, and that there will be a place for international law in the new order. In this article, I discuss the character of law in the international system, on the assumption that globalization will not destroy that system. But even if international law does vanish, perhaps to be replaced by a different system of world law, the issues I consider here will remain relevant because they are inherent in the idea of law itself.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- How Might We Live? Global Ethics in the New Century , pp. 95 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001