Global Administrative Law - Scholarship
Global Administrative Law Working Paper Series
Working Papers are issued at the responsibility of their authors, and do not reflect views of NYU, the IILJ, or associated personnel.
2008
IILJ 2008/2
The Turn to Ethics: Disinvestment from Multinational Corporations for Human Rights Violations — The Case of Norway’s Sovereign Wealth Fund
Simon Chesterman
NYU School of Law / National University of Singapore
2007
IILJ 2007/12
Constructing and Contesting Legitimacy and Accountability in Polycentric Regulatory Regimes
Julia Black
The London School of Economics and Political Science
IILJ 2007/11
The Immunity of International Organizations and the Jurisdiction of their Administrative Tribunals
August Reinisch
The University of Vienna, Department of European, International and Comparative Law
IILJ 2007/10
Vote-Trading in International Institutions
Ofer Eldar
New York University
IILJ 2007/9
Masahiko Asada
WMD Terrorism and Security Council Resolution 1540: Conditions for Legitimacy in International Legislation
Graduate School of Law, Kyoto University
IILJ 2007/6
The Empire’s New Clothes: Political Economy and the Fragmentation of International Law
Eyal Benvenisti, University of Tel Aviv and NYU Global Law Faculty
George W. Downs, NYU Department of Politics
IILJ 2007/5
Accountability in a Global Context
John Ferejohn
Stanford University
IILJ 2007/4
"Democracy-Enhancing Multilateralism"
Robert O. Keohane, Stephen Macedo and Andrew Moravcsik
Princeton University
2006
IILJ 2006/10
Deliberation and Legitimacy in Transnational Environmental Governance
Neil Craik
University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law
IILJ 2006/6
Fair and Equitable Treatment under Investment Treaties as an Embodiment of the Rule of Law
Stephan W. Schill
NYU Law School
IILJ 2006/3
Development Partners and Governance of Public Procurement in Kenya: Enhancing Democracy in the Administration of Aid
J. M. Migai Akech
University of Nairobi
IILJ 2006/2
Neo-Liberal Strategies of Government through Community: The Social Development Program of the World Bank in Indonesia
Tania Murray Li
University of Toronto
2005
IILJ 2005/17
Decentralized Administrative Law in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
James Salzman
Duke University
IILJ 2005/16
Cooption and Resistance: Two Faces of Global Administrative Law
B.S. Chimni
W.B. National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata
IILJ 2005/12
The Operation of UNHCR's Accountability Mechanisms
Mark Pallis
The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn, London
IILJ 2005/11
Regulatory Features and Administrative Law Dimensions of the Olympic Movement's Anti-doping Regime
Alec Van Vaerenbergh
New York University/Graduate Institute of International Studies
IILJ 2005/10
Reform of IMF Conditionality - A Proposal for Self-Imposed Conditionality
Ofer Eldar
New York University
IILJ 2005/7
U.S. Administrative Law: A Model for Global Administrative Law
Richard B. Stewart
New York University
IILJ 2005/6
Managed Mutual Recognition Regimes: Governance without Global Government
Kalypso Nicolaidis, Oxford University
Gregory Shaffer, University of Wisconsin
IILJ 2005/4
Global Private Governance: Lessons from a National Model of Setting Standards in Accounting
Walter Mattli, Oxford University
Tim Buthe, Duke University
IILJ 2005/3
International Organizations and Private Subjects: A Move Toward a Global Administrative Law?
Stefano Battini
Universita degli studi della Tuscia
IILJ 2005/2
Divergent Conceptions of the State: Implications for Global Administrative Law
Janet McLean
University of Auckland
IILJ 2005/1
The Rule of (Administrative) Law in International Law
David Dyzenhaus
University of Toronto
2004
IILJ 2004/7
Accountability and Abuses of Power in World Politics
Ruth W. Grant and Robert O. Keohan
Duke University
IILJ 2004/6
Informal Procedure, Hard and Soft, in International Administration
David Zaring
New York University
IILJ 2004/5
A Deliberative, " Independent" Technocracy v. Democratic Politics: Will the Globe Echo the E.U.?
Martin Shapiro
University of California – Berkeley
IILJ 2004/4
Shrimps, Turtles and Procedure: Global Standards for National Administrations
Sabino Cassese
University of Rome
IILJ 2004/3
Public Choice and Global Administrative Law: Who’s Afraid of Executive Discretion?
Eyal Benvenisti
University of Tel Aviv
IILJ 2004/1
The Emergence of Global Administrative Law
Benedict Kingsbury, Nico Krisch, Richard Stewart
New York University



