The future of individuals in international law : lessons from international Internet Law / Matthias C. Kettemann.
2013
KZ3920 .K48 2013 (Map It)
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Author
Title
The future of individuals in international law : lessons from international Internet Law / Matthias C. Kettemann.
Published
The Hague, The Netherlands : Eleven International Pub., [2013]
Copyright
©2013
Call Number
KZ3920 .K48 2013
ISBN
9789490947873 (hbk.)
9490947873 (hbk.)
9490947873 (hbk.)
Description
xv, 201 pages ; 25 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)813945645
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 171-196) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
vii
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction
1
1.
Framing the Research
11
1.1.
Analytical Framework
11
1.2.
Research Questions
13
1.3.
Methodology
15
1.4.
Individualism and the Logic of Modernity
17
2.
Humanization, Resovereignization and the Evolving Paradigms of International Law
21
2.1.
Introduction
21
2.2.
Ideology in Law and Legal Science
21
2.2.1.
Legal Ideology in Critical Jurisprudence
21
2.2.2.
Legal Idealism and Legal Engineering
24
2.2.3.
Escaping the Siren Song of Ideology
24
2.3.
Paradigm Changes
25
2.3.1.
Scientific Revolutions as Driving Forces of Legal Innovation
25
2.3.2.
Reflecting Paradigm Changes in International Law
27
2.4.
Humanization
29
2.4.1.
Humanization and Its Radiating Effect
29
2.4.2.
Humanization and Security
33
2.4.3.
Humanization and Sovereignty
35
2.5.
Resovereignization
37
2.6.
Conclusions
40
3.
Theory and Practice of the Interposition of States Between Individuals and International Law
43
3.1.
Introduction
43
3.2.
The Position of Individuals in International Law: Introduction to the Subject of Subjects
45
3.3.
Westphalian Origins
48
3.4.
Theoretical Challenges
51
3.4.1.
Subjectivity, Personality, Capacity
51
3.4.2.
Stratifying the Debate
53
3.4.3.
Synthesis: Towards Volkerrechtsunmittelbarkeit
58
3.5.
The Position of Individuals in International Law in Practice: A Review of Representative Regimes
60
3.5.1.
State-Oriented Regimes
61
3.5.2.
Mixed Regimes
66
3.5.3.
Individual-Oriented Regimes
73
3.6.
Critical Appraisal of Interposition Regimes
75
3.6.1.
Conceptual Aspects
75
3.6.2.
Practical Aspects
78
3.7.
Conclusions
80
4.
Revisiting the Interposition of States: The Functional Approach to the Individual in International Law
85
4.1.
Introduction
85
4.2.
The Functional Approach to International Law
86
4.2.1.
Evolution
86
4.2.2.
Methodological Characteristics
86
4.3.
Critique of the Functional Approach
88
4.3.1.
Is Functionalism Anti-Statist?
88
4.3.2.
Is Functionalism's Ethic Utilitarian in Nature?
90
4.4.
The Functional Approach and Regime Design
91
4.5.
The Functional Approach and Legitimacy
94
4.6.
Conclusions
95
5.
The Individual in International Internet Law: A Case Study in Post-Interposition
97
5.1.
Introduction
97
5.2.
What We Talk about When We Talk about Internet Governance
99
5.3.
The Substance of International Internet Law
102
5.3.1.
Material Intersections
102
5.3.2.
Substantive International Internet Law
104
5.3.3.
Assessment and Outlook
107
5.4.
Legitimacy and Effectivity in International Internet Law
108
5.5.
Actors in International Internet Law
110
5.5.1.
Introduction
110
5.5.2.
The Multistakeholder Approach
111
5.5.3.
Legitimacy of Actors in the Internet Governance Regime
115
5.6.
The Regulatory Vocabulary of Internet Governance
120
5.6.1.
Legitimizing Anarchy
120
5.6.2.
Deconstructing Hierarchies
121
5.6.3.
Reconstructing Regulatory Choices in Internet Governance
122
5.6.4.
Regulatory Self-Perception of Internet Governance Rule-Makers
124
5.6.5.
Internet Governance Norms
126
5.6.6.
Relationship of Internet Governance Norms to International Law
130
5.6.7.
Internet Governance Norms as Soft Law
131
5.7.
Conclusions
132
6.
Functional Analysis of International Internet Law
137
6.1.
Introduction
137
6.2.
Implications for International Treaty Law: The Failure of ACTA and the Case for Multistakeholderism
138
6.2.1.
Background
138
6.2.2.
Multistakeholderism Provides Legitimation
139
6.2.3.
Implications
140
6.3.
Implications for the Law of State Responsibility: Developing Obligations of States Regarding the Internet
141
6.3.1.
Background
141
6.3.2.
Assessment
143
6.3.3.
Implications
144
6.4.
Implications for Human Rights Law: Internet Governance and Internet Shutdowns
147
6.4.1.
Background
147
6.4.2.
Assessment
148
6.4.3.
Implications
152
6.5.
Implications for Future Normative Processes: The Potential of Self- and Co-Regulation
153
6.5.1.
Stakeholder Equilibrium
153
6.5.2.
Self-Regulation and Co-Regulation as Policy
154
6.5.3.
The Experience of the Council of Europe
154
6.5.4.
Combining Self-Regulation and Multistakeholderism: A Recent Example
156
6.5.5.
Implications
157
6.6.
Conclusions
159
7.
Conclusions: The Future of Individuals in International Law
163
Bibliography
171
Index
197