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International organizations have always been exclusively seen as vehicles for their member states, exercising delegated powers. This book demonstrates that this picture is seriously outdated: international organizations address a wide variety of social actors, and this needs to be reflected in the way we think about international organizations.
Sommario
1. The vacuum assumption in international organizations law Jan Klabbers; 2. How International organizations may affect the legal position of non-members Fernando Lusa Bordin; 3. Law and the interaction between international organizations René Urueña; 4. Governance shapers? The big four, international organizations and the EU Hans-Wolfgang Micklitz and Evgenia Raili; 5. Towards an Urban internationalism? Cities and international organizations in the interwar era? Helmut Philpp Aust; 6. Climate action in sports - The UN climate change's sports for climate action initiative and its implementation in the wider sports sector Rebecca Schmidt; 7. International organizations and the market Elisabetto Morlino; 8. International organizations as sellers of goods and services Ukri Soirila; 9. Corporate Philanthropy in the UN development sector Tleuzhan Zhunussova; 10. The WHO and the A1H1 Flu: fine-tuning for pandemic responses Sebastian Machado; 11. The problem of applicable law in the contractual relations between international organizations and private parties Orfeas Chasapis Tassinis; 12. The private sector and gavi, the vaccine alliance: a story of continuous evolution Eelco Szabó; 13. Public-private cooperation in global security governance: entanglement, infrastructure and the affordances of fundamental rights Dimitri van den Meerssche; 14. Institutional promiscuity - an epilogue Jan Klabbers.