Full Description
This textbook describes how international development functions, its shortcomings, its theoretical and practical foundations, along with prescriptions for the future. International Development Law provides students with new perspectives on the origins of global poverty, identifies legal impediments to sustainable economic growth, and provides a better understanding of the challenges faced by the international community in resolving global poverty issues. The text is structured into two basic parts: the first part deals with the theoretical and philosophic foundations of the subject, and the second part sets forth issues related to the international financial architecture, namely, international borrowing practices, privatization, and emerging economies.
This book is a perfect teaching vehicle as it takes a multidisciplinary approach to addressing complex issues, legal trends and political questions into a clear, new perspective that is highly accessible to the reader.
Contents
1 Introduction: Setting the Stage.- Part I The Rule of Law: 2 The Rule of Law: Theoretical Principles.- 3 International Development Law: Substantive Principles.- 4 The Human Rights Dimension of International Development.- Part II International Financial Architecture: 5 Sovereign Borrowing and the Debt Crisis: Legal Implications.- 6 Privatization as a Development Strategy.- 7 Emerging Capital Economies.- 8 Corruption and Its Consequences.- 9 Afterthought.