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Whose Global law? Comparative, Regional and Cyber Approaches to Law-Making

Abstract

The 2019 Global Law Research Dialogue Series convened by Elaine Fahey, Jed Odermatt and Elizabeth O’Loughlin was entitled ‘Whose Global Law? Comparative, Regional and Methodological Lenses’. The series focused on three elements: 1) comparative law approaches to the study of global law, 2) regional approaches to law-making, 2) cyber law-making and methodology, as topical case studies, political problems or eternal legal methodology issues warranting discussions and reflections. The thematic areas selected in 2019, including one case study (Cyber), were chosen for their capacity to generate deliberation as to the global and its complex intersection with inter alia public, private, regional, criminal law and international law – not a conclusive list. The distinctive views of comparative public law and public international law continue to be distinct and separate strands of research warranting further reflection. In keeping with the aims of the series, the 2019 instalment brought together an array of scholars from public and private law, governance, science and technology, political economy and practice to reflect upon our understanding of law beyond the Nation State

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