Comparative Regional Integration: Governance and Legal Models is a groundbreaking comparative study on regional or supranational integration through international and regional organizations. It provides the first comprehensive and empirically based analysis of governance systems by drawing on an original sample of 87 regional and international organizations. The authors explain how and why different organizations select specific governance processes and institutional choices, and outline which legal instruments - regulatory, organizational or procedural - are adopted to achieve integration. They reveal how different objectives influence institutional design and the integration model, for example a free trade area could insist on supremacy and refrain from adopting instruments for indirect rule, while a political union would rather engage with all available techniques. This ambitious work merges different backgrounds and disciplines to provide researchers and practitioners with a unique toolbox of institutional processes and legal mechanisms, and a classification of different models of regional and international integration.
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General editors' preface; Preface; List of abbreviations; 1. Governance structures and processes in integration organisations: formalisation of institutional credible commitments for governance; 2. The development of international legal regimes: models and instruments for legal integration beyond states; 3. Study: Lead, follow, or get out of the way? International secretariats in comparative perspective Omri Sender; Executive summary; Index.
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Groundbreaking comparative analysis of governance systems and institutional choices in different regional and international organizations.
Product details
ISBN
9781107578586
Published
2016-09-08
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Weight
830 gr
Height
216 mm
Width
140 mm
Thickness
40 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
528
With