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The Law's Last Frontier: The Private Dimension of International Law

Part of the Hart Monographs in Transnational and International Law series
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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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£90.00
Product Details
Hart Publishing
1509940111 / 9781509940110
eBook (EPUB)
340.9
18/05/2023
United Kingdom
English
160 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%