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Informationen zum Autor Dr Margaret Young is an Associate Professor at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, Australia. She was the inaugural Research Fellow in Public International Law at Pembroke College and the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, University of Cambridge, from 2006 to 2008. Klappentext Leading scholars advance the discussion of international law's fragmentation in new and provocative ways. Zusammenfassung The growing awareness that international law is fragmented into separate and self-standing legal 'regimes' has led to calls for unity and harmonisation. In response! this book combines insights from today's leading theorists and practitioners! who deal with ongoing diversity and regime interaction in new and provocative ways. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: the productive friction between regimes Margaret Young; Part I. Contexts: 1. Two kinds of legal pluralism: collision of transnational regimes in the double fragmentation of world society Gunther Teubner and Peter Korth; 2. International regimes and domestic arrangements: a view from inside out Cheryl Saunders; 3. Regime interaction in creating, implementing and enforcing international law Margaret Young; Part II. Communities: 4. Legal regimes and professional knowledges: the internal politics of regime definition Andrew Lang; 5. A new approach to regime interaction Jeffrey Dunoff; 6. Structural ambiguity: technology transfer in three regimes Stephen Humphreys; Part III. Control: 7. Norm interpretation across international regimes: competences and legitimacy Nele Matz-Lück; 8. Relations between international courts and tribunals: the 'regime problem' James Crawford and Penelope Nevill; 9. Importing other international regimes into World Trade Organisation litigation James Flett; 10. Hegemonic regimes Martti Koskenniemi.