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Contributors

Gavin W. Anderson is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Glasgow, having previously taught at the University of Warwick. He undertook graduate studies at Osgoode Hall Law School, and the University of Toronto. In 2003–04, he was a Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute, Florence, and he has also been a Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies, University of Melbourne. His recent research focuses upon the contribution of the global South to debates on global constitutionalism, and he is the author of Constitutional Rights after Globalisation. Andrew Arato is the Dorothy Hart Hirshon Professor in Political and Social Theory at . He has taught at L’Ecole des hautes études and Sciences Po in Paris, as well as at the Central European University in . Professor Arato has served as a consultant for the Hungarian Parliament on constitutional issues (1996–97), and as US State Department Democracy Lecturer and Consultant (on Constitutional issues) on Nepal (2007). He was re-appointed by the State Department in the same capacity for Zimbabwe (November 2010). Professor Arato’s scholarly research is widely recognized, and conferences and sessions have been organized around his work at University of Glasgow Law School, Koc University, Istanbul and the Faculty of Law, Witwatersrand University, Johannesburg, South Africa. He has published widely on legal and political theory, including his most recent book, Adventures of the Constituent Power (Cambridge University Press, 2017). Jean d’Aspremont is Professor of Public International Law at the University of Manchester, where he founded the Manchester International Law Centre (MILC). He is also Professor of International Law at Sciences Po School of Law, Paris. He is General Editor of the Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law and Director of Oxford International Organizations (OXIO). He is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the European Journal of International Law and series editor of the Melland Schill Studies in International Law. He has acted as counsel in proceedings before the International Court of Justice. Professor d’Aspremont has published widely in the field of international law. Samantha Besson is Professor of Public International Law and European Law at the University of Fribourg (Switzerland). She holds a degree in Swiss and European Law (Universities of Fribourg and Vienna, 1996), a Magister Juris in European and Comparative Law (University of Oxford, 1998), a PhD in Law (University of Fribourg, 1999) and a Habilitation in Legal Theory and Swiss, Comparative, European and International Constitutional Law (University of Berne, 2004). Her research interests lie in public international law, European Union constitutional and institutional law and legal and , and in particular in international, European and comparative human rights law and theory, the sources of international and European law, international

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and European responsibility law, comparative international law and European and Swiss foreign relations law. Andrea Birdsall is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Edinburgh. She received a PhD (Politics) from the University of Edinburgh which she wrote on the international politics of judicial intervention. Her main research and teaching interests lie in the interplay between international relations and international law with a particular focus on human rights, international criminal justice and global governance. Garrett Wallace Brown is Professor of Political Theory and Global Health Policy in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Leeds. His research includes work on cosmopolitanism, globalization theory, global justice, international law, global constitutionalism and global health governance. He has published widely on issues of cosmopolitan global constitutionalism and has published Grounding Cosmopolitanism: From Kant to the Idea of a Cosmopolitan Constitution (Edinburgh University Press, 2009) and The Cosmopolitanism Reader with David Held (Polity Press, 2010). His current book investigates The State and Cosmopolitan Responsibilities and will be published with Oxford University Press in Spring 2018. Jutta Brunnée is Professor of Law and Metcalf Chair in Environmental Law at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. She has published widely in the areas of public interna- tional law and international environmental law and she is co-author of Legitimacy and Legality in International Law: An Interactional Account (Cambridge University Press, 2010), which was awarded the American Society of International Law’s 2011 Certificate of Merit for preeminent contribution to creative scholarship. She served on the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law (2006–16) and was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2013. Başak Çalı is Professor of International Law at Hertie School of Governance, Berlin and Director of Center for Global Public Law at Koç University, Istanbul. Her research and teaching focuses on international law with a specific focus on the role of human rights law and institutions in international law and comparative human rights law. She is a fellow of University of Essex Human Rights Centre and Pluricourts at the University of Oslo. She is the author of Authority of International Law: Obedience, Respect and Rebuttal (Oxford University Press, 2015). Eoin Carolan is an Associate Professor in University College Dublin where he teaches courses in constitutional, comparative and media law. He was awarded the 2011 Kevin Boyle Prize for Outstanding Legal Scholarship for The New Separation of Powers: A Theory for the Modern State (Oxford University Press). He is a graduate of Trinity College Dublin and the University of Cambridge, and a former visiting researcher at Harvard Law School and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Law. Michael W. Doyle is a University Professor of Columbia University. His most recent book is The Question of Intervention: J.S. Mill and the Responsibility to Protect (Yale University Press, 2015). From 2006 to 2013, Doyle chaired the United Nations (UN) Democracy Fund, a fund established in 2005 by the UN General Assembly to promote grass-roots democratization around the world. Doyle previously served as Assistant Secretary- General and special adviser for policy planning to United Nations Secretary-General

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Kofi Annan. He has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society. He has an AB and PhD from Harvard University and an honorary doctor of laws degree from the University of Warwick (UK). Jeffrey L. Dunoff is the Laura H. Carnell Professor of Law at Temple Law School. His research focuses on public international law; international constitutionalism; interna- tional regulatory regimes; international courts; and interdisciplinary approaches to inter- national law. Professor Dunoff has served as a Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School, a Visiting Professor and LAPA Fellow at Princeton University, and a Visiting Fellow at the Lauterpacht Research Centre at Cambridge University. His publications include Ruling the World? Constitutionalism, International Law, and Global Governance (co-editor, with Joel P. Trachtman, Cambridge University Press, 2009), and he is an editor of Global Constitutionalism. Bardo Fassbender is Professor of International Law, European Law and Public Law at the University of St Gallen (Switzerland). He studied law, history and political science at the University of Bonn and holds an LLM from Yale Law School and a Doctor iuris from the Humboldt University in Berlin, where he also completed his Habilitation. He was a Ford Foundation Senior Fellow in Public International Law at Yale University and a Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute. Before coming to St Gallen in 2013, he held the chair in international law and human rights law at the Bundeswehr University in Munich. His principal fields of research are public international law, United Nations law, comparative constitutional law and theory, and the history of international and constitutional law. Iain Ferguson is Lecturer in Political Science at the National Research University – Higher School of Economics in Saint Petersburg, Russia. He is one of the conveners of the British International Studies Association working group on ‘Interpretivism in International Relations’. He has published articles, book chapters and short pieces of journalism on issues of international political theory. Jill Harries is the Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at the University of St Andrews. Her interests include the history of the Roman Empire, the constitutional thought of Cicero and the relationship of law and constitutionalism to autocracy, and she has been associated with the St Andrews Centre for Global Constitutionalism for many years. Among her publications are Sidonius Apollinaris and the Fall of Rome (1994), Cicero and the Jurists (2006), Law and Crime in the Roman World (2007) and Imperial Rome 284-363: The New Empire (2012). Thomas O. Hueglin is a Professor of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University in Canada. His research is focused on the history of political thought, and on comparative federalism. Recent book publications are Comparative Federalism: A Systematic Inquiry (with Alan Fenna, 2nd edn, 2015) and Classical Debates for the 21st Century: Rethinking Political Thought (2008). In 2014, Dr. Hueglin served as external consultant to the Constitutional Drafting Committee (CDC) of the Republic of Yemen. He is currently writing a book on federalism in Canada for University of Toronto Press. Oliver Jütersonke is Head of Research at the Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding (CCDP) of the Graduate Institute of International and Development

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Studies, Geneva – a position he has held since the centre’s inception in 2008. He has also been affiliated with the Zurich University Centre for Ethics since 2007. Author of Morgenthau, Law and Realism (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and a variety of publications on the disciplinary history of international relations and international law, his current research focuses predominantly on peacebuilding, state sovereignty, and the politics of security sector governance. Jan Klabbers is currently Academy Professor (Martti Ahtisaari Chair) at the University of Helsinki, and Visiting Research Professor at Erasmus Law School, Rotterdam. He holds a doctorate – with distinction – from the University of Amsterdam, where he also used to teach. Main publications include An Introduction to International Organizations Law (2015, 3rd edn), International Law (2017, 2nd edn), Treaty Conflict and the European Union (2008), The Concept of Treaty in International Law (1996) and, as co-author, The Constitutionalization of International Law (2009). Mattias Kumm is Inge Rennert Professor of Law as well as Managing Director of the Center for Global Constitutionalism at the WZB Berlin Social Science Research Center as well as Research Professor for ‘Globalization and the Rule of Law’ at Humboldt University. His research and teaching focuses on basic issues and contemporary chal- lenges in global, European and comparative public law. He has taught at leading uni- versities worldwide, and has held professorial appointments at Harvard, Yale and the European University Institute (EUI). He is on the board of various international journals and professional societies and is one of the founding co-editors in chief of the journal Global Constitutionalism. Anthony F. Lang, Jr. is a Professor in the School of International Relations at the University of St Andrews. He founded the Centre for Global Constitutionalism in 2008 and served as one of the editors of Global Constitutionalism from 2010 to 2016. He has published widely in international political theory, including three single-authored books, six edited books and numerous articles and chapters. Susanna Mancini (PhD, European University Institute) holds the Chair of Comparative Constitutionalism at the University of Bologna School of Law. She is a recurrent visitor at SAIS Johns Hopkins University, the Cardozo School of Law and the Central European University. She is interested in the intersection of law and culture, and particularly in law and religion, gender and the law, reproductive rights, federalism and secession. She is a co-author of the Dorsen Rosenfeld, Sajo, Baer and Susanna Mancini Comparative Constitutionalism Cases and Materials (West, 2016) and she is currently working on an edited volume (with Michel Rosenfeld) on the ‘conscience wars’ (Cambridge University Press). Peter Niesen is Professor of Political Theory at Hamburg University and a long-standing member of the Frankfurt Cluster of Excellence ‘Formation of Normative Orders’. His research interests lie in international political theory, Kant, Bentham, and animal politics. Among his recent publications are ‘The “mixed” constituent legitimacy of the European federation’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 2017; ‘Roots of Mill’s radicalism’, in D. Miller and C. Macleod (eds), A Companion to Mill (Chichester: Wiley 2017); and ‘What is animal politics?’ (with Svenja Ahlhaus), in Historical Social Research, 2015.

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Francis Oakley is the Edward Dorr Griffin Professor of the History of Ideas at Williams College, Massachusetts, and President Emeritus of that College. Educated at Oxford University, the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Toronto, and Yale University, he is the author of 15 books and co-editor of three others on topics pertaining to medieval intellectual and religious life and to American higher education. In 2016 the Medieval Academy of America awarded him its Haskins Medal for his three-volume work, The Emergence of Western Political Thought in the Latin Middle Ages (New Haven, CT and London, Yale University Press, 2010–15). Anne Peters is Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law Heidelberg (Germany), and a Professor at the universities of Heidelberg, Freie Universität Berlin and Basel (Switzerland). She has been a member of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) in respect of Germany (2011–15) and served as the President of the European Society of International Law (2010–12). Born in Berlin in 1964, Anne studied at the universities of Wurzburg, Lausanne, Freiburg and Harvard. Her current research interests relate to public international law including its history, global animal law, global governance and global constitutionalism, and the status of humans in international law. M.J. Peterson is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst (USA). She has held visiting appointments at the University of Maryland, the University of California Berkeley and the . Her research focuses on international cooperation through intergovernmental organizations, particularly regard- ing environmental issues and management of high seas fisheries and Antarctica, and regu- lation of human activity in outer space. She is the author of five books and of articles in the American Journal of International Law, the American Political Science Review, Global Governance, International Organization and World Politics. Michel Rosenfeld is University Professor of Law and Comparative Democracy, Justice Sydney L. Robins Professor of Human Rights and Director of the Program on Global and Comparative Constitutional Theory at the Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University in . He was president of the International Association of Constitutional Law and the founding Editor-in Chief of the International Journal of Constitutional Law (I.CON). He is the author of numerous books and articles that have been translated into ten foreign languages, including The Identity of the Constitutional Subject (2010) and Law, Justice, Democracy and the Clash of Cultures (2011). William E. Scheuerman is Professor of Political Science and International Studies at Indiana University, where he teaches political and legal theory. He is the author of six books and editor or co-editor of three others. His Between the Norm and the Exception: The Frankfurt School and the Rule of Law (MIT, 1994) won a number of prestigious prizes, and many of Bill’s articles have been translated into Portuguese, German, Spanish, Swedish, and other languages. His latest book, What is Civil Disobedience?, will appear with Polity Press in 2018. Christine Schwöbel-Patel is Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool’s School of Law and Social Justice and co-Director of the Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law research cluster. She is the author of Global Constitutionalism in International Legal

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Perspective (Martinus Nijhoff, 2011) and editor of Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law: An Introduction (Routledge, 2014). Jo Shaw holds the Salvesen Chair of European Institutions at the University of Edinburgh. Her research focuses on citizenship and constitutionalism in the European context. Chris Thornhill is Professor of Law at the University of Manchester. Notable among his recent publications are A Sociology of Constitutions (Cambridge University Press, 2011), A Sociology of Transnational Constitutions (Cambridge University Press, 2016), (co-editor) Law and the Formation of Modern Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2014) and (co-editor) Sociological Constitutionalism (Cambridge University Press, 2017). Stephen J. Toope is Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto. He was President, the University of British Columbia, from 2006 to 2014. A former President of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, and Dean of Law, McGill University, Toope also served as Law Clerk to the Right Honorable Brian Dickson of the Supreme Court of Canada. He also served as Chair of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances. He was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2015. In October 2017, he will become Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. Joel P. Trachtman is Professor of International Law at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Recent books include The Future of International Law: Global Government (Cambridge, 2013), The Tools of Argument (Createspace, 2013), The International Law of Economic Migration: Toward the Fourth Freedom (Upjohn Institute, 2009), Ruling the World: Constitutionalism, International Law, and Global Governance (Cambridge, 2009), Developing Countries in the WTO Legal System (Oxford, 2009) and The Economic Structure of International Law (Harvard 2008). Professor Trachtman has served as a member of the boards of the American Journal of International Law and the European Journal of International Law. Martine Julia van Ittersum is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Dundee, United Kingdom. She is the author of Profit and Principle: Hugo Grotius, Natural Rights Theories and the Rise of Dutch Power in the East Indies, 1595–1615 (Leiden: Brill Academic, 2006). She has published widely on the history of international law and on the theory and practice of Western imperialism and colonialism, particularly in the early modern period. Most of her publications are available at https://dundee.academia.edu/ MartinevanIttersum. Neil Walker holds the Regius Chair of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations at the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom. Previously he was Professor of European Law at the European University Institute in Florence (2000–2008). He has published extensively on the constitutional dimension of legal order at sub-state, state, supranational and global levels. He has also published at length on the relationship between security, legal order and political community. His most recent books are Intimations of Global Law (Cambridge, 2015) and The Scottish Independence Referendum: Constitutional and Political Implications (co-editor, Oxford, 2016).

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Antje Wiener holds the Chair of Political Science, especially Global Governance, at the University of Hamburg. She was made a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in the United Kingdom in 2011. Wiener is a founding editor of the interdisciplinary journal Global Constitutionalism: Democracy, Human Rights, Rule of Law. She is the author of numerous articles and books including A Theory of Contestation (Springer, 2014), The Invisible Constitution of Politics: Contested Norms and International Encounters (Cambridge, 2008) and European Citizenship Practice: Building Institutions of a Non- State (Westview, 1998). She has held visiting fellowships at Edinburgh, Cambridge, Stanford, Sussex, Victoria, Florence and Oxford, among others. Prior to coming to Hamburg in 2009 she was Chair of Political Science and International Relations at the Queen’s University Belfast and at the University of Bath. Her current research and teach- ing interests are in the fields of international relations theory especially norms research. Jan Wilkens is a doctoral student and Lecturer at the Chair of Global Governance, University of Hamburg, Germany. His work focuses on the intersection of norms, conten- tious politics and international relations. This research is informed by constructivist and postcolonial scholarship. Empirically, he focuses on the global politics of West Asia and North Africa, specifically Syria. Recent publications include ‘Contention and constitu- tionalization in the global realm: assessing the uprisings in West Asia and North Africa and their impact on international politics’ in Fawaz A. Gerges (ed.), Contentious Politics in the Middle East: Popular Resistance and Marginalised Activism beyond the Arab Uprisings (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).

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