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PRIVATE LAW AND STATE-MAKING IN THE AGE OF GLOBALIZATION
Daniela
Caruso
Boston University School of Law Working Paper 06-09
Abstract
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European
Union and of free-trade regimes, bears no obvious relation to the traditional
pillars of western private law (mostly contracts, torts, and property
doctrines). The claim of this article is that the global diffusion of
private law discourse contributes significantly to the emergence of new
centers of authority in the global arena. The article tests the impact
of private law arguments in three contexts – the growing legitimacy
of regional human rights adjudication, the consolidation of the institutions
of the European Union, and the higher binding force of international investment
treaties. Private law gains popularity in global legal discourse when
its most centrifugal features are emphasized (individual autonomy, horizontal
dispersion of authority, indifference to governmental institutions). Once
popular, however, private law discourse also evokes centripetal arguments
(aspiration to internal coherence, uniformity in adjudication) and therefore
paves the way to new centers of public, vertical power. Most noticeably,
private law discourse provides regional or global institutions with a
patina of distributive neutrality, and therefore facilitates the endorsement
of ideologically laden institutional developments.
Accepted Paper Series
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Daniela Caruso Contact Information:
danielac@bu.edu
Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Ave
Boston, MA 02215
USA
(617) 353-7024
SSRN Site:
http://ssrn.com/abstract=900106
Presentation and Publication Information:
Forthcoming, 39:1 New York University Journal of International
Law and Politics (2006)
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