Abstract

In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of international law making in the global order. We contend that the features of state consent in international law depart substantially from those assumed by theorists of the liberal order, who subscribe, in most cases, to the realist conception of state action. We argue, against those theorists, that state consents to coercive measures, and the state’s role in carrying them out, has ceased to be central to an account of global law. We conclude that international law—often thought of as law beyond the state—now has expanded its scope to reach individuals and corporations, and that this change has important ramifications for theories of global justice.

Highlights

  • A prominent feature of liberal, and most republican, theories of global justice is that they begin from consent.[1]

  • In this paper we argue that the concept of consent to the global order masks a considerable amount of ambiguity in how the concept is deployed, as the features that define state consent as a matter of law depart substantially from those assumed by theorists of the liberal order, who subscribe, in most cases, to the realist conception of state action.[2]

  • We will proceed in this paper by developing the classical models of consent to the global system, suggesting ways in which it has been undermined by the recent developments of treaty law

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Summary

Global Justice and the New Regulatory Regime

Nous interrogeons le rôle de l’accord dans l’ordre global en discutant les modes courants de constitution des lois internationales au sein de cet ordre. Nous prétendons que les fonctions de l’accord étatique en loi internationale s’écartent substantiellement de celles assumées par les théoriciens de l’ordre libéral, qui souscrivent, dans la plupart des cas, à la conception réaliste de l’action étatique. Nos posons que l’État consent à des mesures coercitives, et que le rôle de l’État d’effectuer celles-ci a cessé d’être central dans l’explication de la loi globale. Nous concluons que la loi internationale – souvent pensée comme une loi hors de l’État – a maintenant étendu son spectre jusqu’aux individus et corporations, et que ce changement a d’importantes ramifications que les théories globales de la justice devraient considérer. Cet article est diffusé et préservé par Érudit. Il a pour mission la promotion et la valorisation de la recherche. https://www.erudit.org/fr/

CONSENT IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
THE EVOLUTION OF TREATY DESIGN
MARKET REGULATION AND PUBLIC GOODS
CONSEQUENCES FOR THEORIES OF GLOBAL JUSTICE
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