My research is returning to its MIT roots in international political economy. In addition to founding a research group on global capitalism and law, I have a number of projects underway that consider empirically, historically and normatively how global economic rules are constructed and operate.
Backlash and the Contested Authority of International Institutions
In 2017, I started to write and publish more directly on the issue of backlash and contestation regarding international law. This is actually an old theme for me as throughout my career I have investigated backlash, constestation over international law, and how international law and international courts fare in confrontations with nationalist and populist governments. Some recent and older work is listed here.
China’s and the International Order: Engaging with International Law
In 2018, I traveled to China and began to more directly engage the question of how China’s rise might impact the international political and legal order. This exploration is ongoing.
US Export Controls: I spent a year at the Bureau of Industry and Security as a Senior Research Fellow. I am transforming the Export Control Policy review into a book. I am posting published work on this page.
Comparative International Courts
This research examines a variety of questions related to creation and varying influence and authority of international courts. I compare international courts in different functional roles, across issues areas (economic courts, human rights, and international criminal law) and across time and space. The ultimate goal is to determine the conditions under which international courts become politically salient and influential. See also my website for The New Terrain of International Law.
International Regime Complexity
This research explores how the plurality of overlapping international institutions addressing similar issues—so called international regime complexes—is itself shaping of international relations.
The Global Diffusion of European Legal Models
In The New Terrain of International Law I document how the proliferation of “new style” international courts reflects the diffusion of European legal models to different parts of the world. The international courts I have studied in Latin America and Africa are all supranational legal transplants. My research on international courts operating in Latin America and Africa help me integrate a global perspective on the diffusion of legal models with deep case-studies of why local actors copy European models, and how these transplants do and do not follow European approaches. In Supranational Legal Transplants: The Law and Politics of the Andean Tribunal we suggest that legal transplants can learn most from each other, and that Europe can also draw lessons from international courts that have long struggled with strong political leaders, turbulent political environments, and inconsistent support for the rule of law.
Latin America’s International Legal Transplant: The Andean Tribunal of Justice
Laurence Helfer and I have taken an extremely deep dive into studying one of the most successful international legal transplants, the Andean Tribunal of Justice (ATJ). We examined why Andean leaders chose to copy the European Court of Justice. We coded every ATJ preliminary ruling from 1987-2015, and analyzed the ATJ’s noncompliance decisions. Our articles and book examine how the ATJ interacts with its interlocutors, the influence of the ATJ on Andean Intellectual Property law, and why the ATJ’s experience has been so different compared to the European Court. This comparison reveals the importance of not blindly emulating European models, and how context shapes the development of transplanted international judicial institutions.
Africa’s International Courts
This body of research, undertaken in collaboration with Laurence Helfer, explores Africa’s very new international courts to see how international courts build political support and legitimacy in developing country contexts. We examine the human rights and economic law politics of the ECOWAS Community Court, and political backlash in response to international judicial intervention.
The European Court of Justice’s Political Power
This series of articles and books considers how the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has shaped different aspects of European Community politics. I examine why national court’s accepted the ECJ’s ambitious legal claims regarding the supremacy of European law, how the ECJ’s influence varies across countries and issues, the relationship between the ECJ and national governments, and the role of the ECJ in the Economic Community as compared to the Coal and Steel Community.