Duke Law School
Duke Law Journal


 
    LAW AND CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS


Volume 68                     
Summer/Autumn 2005
Numbers 3 & 4

The Emergence of Global Administrative Law

Benedict Kingsbury, Nico Krisch, Richard B. Stewart, & Jonathan B. Wiener
Special Editors




Foreword: Global Governance as Administration -- National and Transnational Approaches to Global Administrative Law Benedict Kingsbury,
Nico Krisch,
Richard B. Stewart, & Jonathan B. Wiener
1




The Emergence of Global Administrative Law Benedict Kingsbury,
Nico Krisch,
& Richard B. Stewart
15




U.S. Admininstrative Law: A Model for Global Administrative Law? Richard B. Stewart 63




Global Standards for National Administrative Procedure Sabino Cassese 109




The Rule of (Administrative) Law in International Law David Dyzenhaus 127




Divergent Legal Conceptions of the State: Implications for Global Admininstrative Law Janet McLean 167




Decentralized Administrative Law in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development James Salzman 189




Global Private Governance: Lessons from a National Model of Setting Standards in Accounting Walter Mattli &
Tim Buthe
225




Transnational Mutual Recognition Regimes: Governance without Global Government Kalypso Nicolaidis & Gregory Shaffer 263




The Interplay Between Actors as a Determinant of the Evolution of Administrative law in International Institutions Eyal Benvenisti 319




"Deliberative," "Independent" Technocracy v. Democratic Politics: Will the Globe Echo the E.U.? Martin Shapiro 341








A Global Administrative Law Bibliography
357