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E-raamat: Negotiating State and Non-State Law: The Challenge of Global and Local Legal Pluralism

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This volume addresses the relationship between the nation-state and various forms of non-state law, considering whether and to what extent state and non-state law can coexist and how each form of law seeks to influence as well as transform the other.

Trends in legal philosophy, international law, transnational law, law and religion, and political science all point toward the increasing role played by non-state law in both public and private ordering. Numerous organizations, institutions, associations, and groups have emerged alongside the nation-state, each purporting to provide their members with rules and norms to govern their conduct and organize their affairs. The nation-state increasingly finds itself sandwiched, so to speak, between two broad and contrasting categories of non-state law. The first category – law above the state – captures a wide range of legal systems that function across the territorial borders of nation-states. The second category – law below the state – includes various forms of local customary, religious, and indigenous law. Indeed, as these forms of non-state law persist and proliferate alongside the nation-state, the relationship between state and non-state law becomes more complex, multifaceted, and tense. This volume addresses this relationship between the nation-state and these various forms of non-state law, considering whether and to what extent state and non-state law can coexist and how each form of law seeks to influence as well as transform the other.

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Addresses the relationship between the nation-state and non-state law, considering how they can coexist and transform each other.
List of Contributors
ix
Introduction 1(14)
Michael A. Helfand
Part I Negotiating State and Non-State Law: The Legal Pluralist Project
1 Non-State Lawmaking through the Lens of Global Legal Pluralism
15(26)
Paul Schiff Berman
2 What Is Non-State Law? A Primer
41(18)
Ralf Michaels
3 International Law and Sociolegal Scholarship: Toward a Spatial Global Legal Pluralism
59(24)
Sally Engle Merry
Part II Negotiating State Law and International/Transnational Law
4 The Constitutional Itch: Transnational Private Regulatory Governance and the Woes of Legitimacy
83(28)
Peer Zumbansen
5 International Human Rights Law as a Catalyst for the Recognition and Evolution of Non-State Law
111(23)
Helen Quane
6 The Administrative State Goes Global
134(38)
Daphne Barak-Erez
Oren Perez
7 International Precedent and the Practice of International Law
172(25)
Harlan Grant Cohen
Part III Negotiating State Law and Religious/Indigenous Law
8 Religion, Family Law, and Competing Norms
197(18)
Joel A. Nichols
9 The Resolution of Disputes in State and Tribal Law in the South of Iraq: Toward a Cooperative Model of Pluralism
215(46)
Haider Ala Hamoudi
Wasfi H. Al-Sharaa
Aqeel Al-Dahhan
10 Is There Such a Thing as Non-State Law? Lessons from Kiryas Joel
261(46)
Nomi Mara Stolzenberg
11 The Persistence of Sovereignty and the Rise of the Legal Subject
307(26)
Michael A. Helfand
Index 333
Michael A. Helfand is an associate professor at the Pepperdine University School of Law as well as the associate director of the Diane and Guilford Glazer Institute for Jewish Studies. Helfand is an expert on religious law and religious liberty, focusing on how US law treats religious law, custom, and practice. A frequent author and lecturer, he has published in numerous law journals, including the Yale Law Journal, the New York University Law Review, and the Duke Law Journal, as well as in various public audience publications, including the Los Angeles Times and the National Law Journal. He received his JD from Yale Law School in 2007 and his PhD from Yale University in 2009.