'Transnational Law is more than and different from Public International Law. This idea encompasses a whole world of facts, of instruments and of thoughts. Over the past sixty years, Transnational Law has ventured far beyond the circles of international lawyers as it continues to resonate with efforts in political science, theory and philosophy to conceptualize political order and democratic legitimacy across the nation-state's boundaries. The gift of writings presented here to Jessup and to the legal community at the 60th anniversary of the first publication of 'Transnational Law' sketches and revisits this history and idea in a truly congenial way – dense, thoughtful, and inspiring.' Stefan Grundmann, European University Institute, Florence and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Introduction: transnational law, with and beyond Jessup Peer Zumbansen; Part I. Transnational Law: The Public and the Private: 1. Jessup at the United Nations: international legacy, transnational possibilities Stephen Minas; 2. The concept of a global legal system Christopher A. Whytock; 3. How comity makes transnationalism work Thomas Schultz and Niccolò Ridi; Part II. Transnational Law as Regulatory Governance: 4. Aiding and abetting in theorising the increasing softification of the international normative order – a darker legacy of Jessup's transnational law? Karsten Nowrot; 5. From international law to transnational law, from transnational law to transnational legal orders Gregory Shaffer and Carlos Coye; 6. Transnational law in the Pacific Century: mapping pesticide regulation in China Francis Snyder, Zhouke Hu and Lili Ni; 7. Transnational law in context: the relevance of Jessup's analysis for the study of 'international' arbitration Florian Grisel; 8. Transnational Law and Adjudication – Domestic, International and Foreign Intersections Bryan Horrigan; 9. Transnational Law and Global Dispute Resolution Shahla Ali; 10. Conflicts of law and the challenge of transnational data flows Paul Schiff Berman; 11. What lex sportiva tells you about transnational law Antoine Duval; 12. Family law: a blindspot Ivana Isailovic; Part III. Transnational Law: The Field's Normative Stakes: 13. Locating private transnational authority in the global political economy A. Claire Cutler; 14. Transnational law as drama Jothie Rajah; 15. Transnational law as unseen law Natasha Affolder; 16. The Cri De Jessup sixty years later: transnational law's intangible objects and abstracted frameworks Larry Catá Backer; 17. The private life of transnational law: reading Jessup from the postcolony Prabhakar Singh; 18. After the backlash: a new pride for transnational law? Ralf Michaels; Part IV. Conclusion: Epilogue – difficulties for every solution: defining transnational law at the edge of transdisciplinarity Vik Kanwar.