Fr. 166.00

Limits of Leviathan - Contract Theory and the Enforcement of International Law

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Robert Scott is a nationally recognized scholar and teacher in the fields of contracts! commercial transactions and bankruptcy. He was Lewis F. Powell Jr. Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law from 1982-2003! and William L. Matheson & Robert M. Morgenthau Distinguished Professor from 2001-03. In 2003 he was named an inaugural recipient of the David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professorship. He has delivered numerous papers and published extensively in law journals. He has co-authored four books on contracts and commercial transactions. Among his many articles are six that he co-authored with Prof. Charles Goetz that set the standard for the economic analysis of the law of contracts. Paul Stephan is an expert on international business and Soviet and post-Soviet legal systems who spent his career studying and writing about the globalization of the world economy and the transition away from Soviet-style socialism. He joined the Virginia faculty in 1979 and was the Percy Brown Jr. Professor of Law from 1991 to 2003. He has written extensively on international law! corruption! and the history of the Cold War! as well as on taxation and constitutional law. He has worked in Russia! Georgia! Ukraine! Albania! and Slovakia on behalf of the U.S. Treasury and in Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan on behalf of the International Monetary Fund. Klappentext Originally published in 2006! The Limits of Leviathan documents the emergence of hard international law. Zusammenfassung Originally published in 2006! The Limits of Leviathan identifies areas in international law where formal enforcement provides the most promising means of promoting cooperation and where it does not. This book explains how international law! like contract! depends largely on the willingness of responsible parties to make commitments. Inhaltsverzeichnis Foreword; 1. Introduction; 2. States, firms, and the enforcement of international law; 3. Lessons from contract theory; 4. A model of optimal enforcement; 5. Patterns of international law enforcement; 6. The choice between formal and informal enforcement; 7. The future of international law and its enforcement; Glossary; Table of authorities; Index....

Product details

Authors Robert E. Scott, Paul B. Stephan, Stephan Paul B.
Publisher Cambridge University Press Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 14.08.2006
 
EAN 9780521858465
ISBN 978-0-521-85846-5
Dimensions 161 mm x 240 mm x 20 mm
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Law > International law, foreign law

LAW / International, LAW / Public, LAW / Commercial / International Trade, International economic & trade law, Public international law: economic and trade

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