ABSTRACT

Despite its centrality to academic discussions of power and influence, there is little consensus in legal scholarship over what constitutes an actor in rule-making. This book explores the range of actors involved in rule-making within European Union law and Public International law, and focuses especially on actors that are often overlooked by formative and doctrinal approaches.

Drawing together contributions from many scholars in various fields the book examines such issues as the accommodation of new actors in the process of postnational rule-making, the visibility or covertness of actors within the process, and the role of social acceptance and legitimacy in postnational rule-making.

In its endeavour to render and examine the work and effect of actors often side-lined in the study of postnational rule-making, this book will be of great use and interest to students and scholars of EU law, international law and socio-legal studies.

chapter |63 pages

Framing actors in postnational rule-making

Between doctrine and lexicon

chapter |20 pages

Mapping the terrain of institutional ‘lawmaking'

Form and function in international law

chapter |21 pages

International relations and global governance

The EU and ASEAN as actors in global governance institutions

chapter |71 pages

New institutional components and systems

Establishing autonomy in postnational rule-making

chapter |22 pages

Strained actorness

The ‘new' European Council in theory and practice

chapter |20 pages

Transnational parliamentarism and global governanc

The new practice of democracy

chapter |27 pages

Interaction as a site of postnational rule-making

A case study of the Inter-American system of human rights

chapter |70 pages

Interactions between actors in postnational rule-making

Framing practices ‘in the shadows' and beyond

chapter |22 pages

Lawmakers in the shadows

Legal academics in the construction of European private law

chapter |24 pages

EU lobbyists

Rule-makers ‘in the shadows'?