Horatia Muir Watt’s exquisitely researched and documented book is a tour de force.

Revue critique de droit International Privé (RCDIP)

Lyrical and erudite ... This is courageous, committed work—a unique contribution in the best of the critical tradition.

Pierre Schlag, University Distinguished Professor and Byron R White Professor of Law, University of Colorado (Boulder)

[An] innovative and surprising work … The book stands out as a rare example of a truly transdisciplinary attempt at relocating law within the human sciences. This book challenges one’s understanding of private international law, and is an invitation to rethink the purpose of our involvement in its practise or scholarship.

Conflict of Laws

This important book offers an ambitious and interdisciplinary vision of how private international law (or the conflict of laws) might serve as a heuristic for re-working our general understandings of legality in directions that respond to ever-deepening global ecological crises. Unusual in legal scholarship, the author borrows (in bricolage mode) from the work of Bruno Latour, alongside indigenous cosmologies, extinction theories and Levinassian phenomenology, to demonstrate why this field's specific frontier location at the outpost of the law – where it is viewed from the outside as obscure and from the inside as a self-contained normative world – generates its potential power to transform law generally and globally.

Combining pragmatic and pluralist theory with an excavation of ‘shadow’ ecological dimensions of law, the author, a recognised authority within the field as conventionally understood, offers a truly global view. Put simply, it is a generational magnum opus. All international and transnational lawyers, be they in the private or public field, should read this book.

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Preface v

Introduction: Inklings 1
I. Nature as Alterity in Legal Form 5
II. Nature, Legality and Natural Law 8
III. Law, Bios and Bare Life 13
IV. Globalisation: A Very Short Story 14
V. The ‘Old Settlement’ and the Legal Summa Divisio 15
VI. Caveats: Law and Nomos; Lex and Ius 20
VII. Private International Law and its Double Scenography 23
VIII. Law’s Residues and the Shadow Story 28
IX. Bricolage, Interdisciplinarity and Method 29
X. What is Ecological about this Alternative Jurisprudential Design? 31
XI. Plan and Project 31

Part I
Epistemology and Genealogy: Struggling for the Soul of Method
I. An Initial Glimpse: Private International Law and its Inner Conflicts 45
II. An Example: Cross-Border Environmental Litigation 46
III. Down to Earth: Punctum 50
IV. Bird’s-Eye View: Studium 56
V. The Stakes in Method 61
A. Monism vs Pluralism and Theories of Truth 61
B. The Ecological Nature of Method 63
C. Approaching Alterity in Legal Form 65
Nature at the Stake 68
1. The Story of Origin 69
I. Genealogy and Methodology 71
A. The Consensual Tale 72
B. Frictions and Contradictions 77
II. Myth and Legacy 84
A. The Domestic Front: Irrelevance 85
B. The International Front: Self-Isolation 90
The Return of the Repressed 94
2. The Shadow Account 96
I. Dialectical Tensions 99
A. Paradigm Dichotomies 101
B. Nesting 104
II. Competing Imaginaries 107
A. State/Non-State 110
B. Law and Fact 118
C. Foreign/Domestic 124
Eclosion 129

Part II
Aesthetics and Ontology: Constructing the Nomos of the In-Between
3. Jurisdictional Jurisprudence 141
I. Topos and Telos 145
A. Territoriality as Natural Description 147
B. Territoriality as Value Judgement 152
II. Sovereignty 156
A. The Law of Laws 158
B. The Status of the Exception 166
Transition(s) 171
4. A Jurisprudence of the Border 172
I. A ‘Juridical Ecology of Ligatures’ 178
A. Law as Go-between 181
B. Law’s Oscillation 189
II. Law’s Morphological Plurality 193
A. The Gaze of the Jaguar 199
B. The Art of the Shaman 208
Before the Law: After Extinction? 215

Part III
Economy and Ethics: Repairing the Split in the Oikos
5. Private International Neoliberal Legality 227
I. Toeing the Line 227
A. Debt and the Capture of Human Collateral 230
B. Foreign Investment and the ‘Capture of the Space of the International’ 236
C. Capital Structure and the Capture of Accountability 240
D. Development and the Capture of Time 247
II. Disembedding the Rule of Law 251
A. The Darwinian U-turn: A Brief but Giddy Detour 253
B. Autonomy as a Licence to Disembed 258
Reversal 267
6. An Ethic of Responsiveness: The Demands of Interalterity 269
I. The Appeal of the (Legal) Other 274
A. The Categories of Tolerance 277
B. The Social Construction of Acceptability (Ordre Public) 282
C. Wrongs of Rights 285
II. The Law of the Other 292
A. Responsibility and the Experience of Incommensurability 296
B. Hospitality and the De-centring of Self 301
Coalescence 309
7. Residue: Law’s Last Judgment: The Threshold of Our Responsibility 311

Bibliography 316
Index 339

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This book is a critical assessment of the status of private international law within the broader firmament of international law by one of the field’s leading commentators.
Innovative take on the role of private international law in the globalised world

High-quality scholarship in public international law and private international law.
The objective of this series is to publish high-quality scholarship in public international law and private international law, as well as work that adopts "transnational law" as its thematic, theoretical or doctrinal focus. The series strives to be a leading venue for work of the following sort:

- critical reappraisals of foundational concepts and core doctrinal principles of both public and private international law, and their operation in practice, including insights drawn from general legal theory;

- analysis and development of conceptions of 'transnational law', including in relation to the role of unofficial law and informal processes in transnational regulation and in relation to theories and studies of 'governance' in transnational spheres; and

- empirical studies of the emergence, evolution and transformation of international and/or transnational legal orders, including accounts and explanations of how law is constructed within different communities of interpretation and practice.

In relation to the first of these categories, the series especially welcomes monographs that explore the interactions between the ever-integrating fields of public and private international law. Of special interest are explorations of the extent to which these interactions are structured by higher-order principles and policies, on the one hand, and by politics and the exercise of various forms of power, on the other hand.

The series is open to work not only by law scholars but also by scholars from cognate disciplines.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781509968381
Publisert
2024-11-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Hart Publishing
Vekt
580 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
368

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Horatia Muir Watt is Professor at Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France.