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Winter 2003: Volume 10, Issue 1

Symposium: Globalization and Governance: The Prospects for Democracy

Editors Note
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.

Part I: Transnational and Supranational Democracy

The Participation Of States And Citizens In Global Governance
Saskia Sassen

Exercising Public Authority Beyond The State: Transnational Democracy And/Or Alternative Legitimation Strategies?
Jost Delbrück

The Emergence Of Democratic Participation In Global Governance (Paris, 1919)
Steve Charnovitz

The Community Political Order
Paul Craig

Part II: Globalization, Democracy and Domestic Law

Globalization, Democracy, And The Need For A New Administrative Law
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.

Globalization And Governance: The Prospects For Democracy
Sir David Williams

Government To State:  Globalization, Regulation, And Governments As Legal Persons
Janet Mclean

The Impact On Public Law Of Privatization, Deregulation, Outsourcing, And Downsizing: A Canadian Perspective
David Mullan & Antonella Ceddia

Achieving Sustainable Development:  The Centrality And Multiple Facets Of Integrated Decisionmaking
John C. Dernbach

Democracy In Global Environmental Governance: Issues, Interests, And Actors In The Mekong And The Rhine
Tun Myint

Part III: Globalization and Empire

The Democratization Process And Structural Adjustment In Africa
Muna Ndulo

Contract Of Mutual (In)Difference:  Governance And The Humanitarian Apparatus In Contemporary Albania And Kosovo
Mariella Pandolfi

A Theory Of Imperial Law:  A Study On U.S. Hegemony And The Latin Resistance
Ugo Mattei

The Earl A. Snyder Lecture in International Law

Empire’s Law
Susan Marks

Alfred C. Aman, Jr.

Former Dean and Roscoe C. O'Byrne Professor of Law
Phone: 812-855-8886
E-mail: aaman@indiana.edu

From 1991 to the summer of 2002, Professor Aman served as Dean of the Indiana University School of Law—Bloomington, sharing his ideas for the education of global professionals. He believes that lawyers of the twenty-first century will have to be versatile professionals, capable of dealing with the laws of several countries and at home with the basics of other disciplines, such as anthropology, philosophy, economics, and political science, and for some legal issues, the hard sciences.

An internationally known scholar and lecturer, Professor Aman has held a Fulbright Chair in Trento, Italy, and visiting professorships in Italy, France, and England. He is the author of four books and numerous articles on administrative and international law, and teaches in these areas. He is the founding faculty editor of the Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies.

A.B., 1967, University of Rochester; J.D., 1970, University of Chicago. Executive Editor, University of Chicago Law Review. Clerk, Hon. Elbert P. Tuttle, U.S. Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit, 1970-72. Associate, Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., 1972-77. Faculty, Cornell Law School, 1977-1991. Member, Phi Beta Kappa.

IJGLS Articles by Professor Aman