Negotiating State and Non-State Law: The Challenge of
Global and Local Legal Pluralism (ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory)
edited by Michael A.
Helfand
Non-state law is playing an
increasing role in both public and private ordering. Numerous organizations
have emerged alongside the nation-state, each purporting to provide their
members with rules and norms to govern their conduct and organize their
affairs. The nation-state increasingly finds itself sandwiched, between two
broad and contrasting categories of non-state law. The first - law above the
state - captures legal systems that function across the territorial borders of
nation-states. The second category - law below the state - includes forms of
local customary, religious, and indigenous law. As these forms of non-state law
persist and proliferate alongside the nation-state, the relationship between
state and non-state law becomes more complex, multifaceted, and tense. This
volume addresses this relationship considering whether and to what extent state
and non-state law can coexist and how each form of law seeks to influence as
well as transform the other.