Full Description
What if we rethought international law through the lens of the commons? This book challenges us to examine global goods, resources, and spaces—from water to culture, from the Moon to the internet—not as objects to exploitation, but as productive systems shared by active communities and governed by international law: as vibrant universal commons.
Drawing on an extensive survey of practice, legal instruments, and jurisprudence, it demonstrates how individuals, peoples, states, and international organisations may act as commoners in relation to resources that are often overlooked—whether too small or too vast—yet essential to life.Moving beyond profit-driven models, the book advances a regenerative framework in which international law secures rights to commoning. It demonstrates how fragmented rules can be integrated into a comprehensive branch of international law through a paradigm shift.



