The Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies is a faculty-edited interdisciplinary journal focusing on the intersections of global and domestic legal regimes, markets, politics, technologies, and cultures.
NOTE: Articles written by Indiana University faculty and students are embargoed for one year, all other articles are embargoed for five years.
Current Issue: Volume 18, Issue 2 (2011)
Symposium
Introduction: Transnational Corporations Revisited
Gralf-Peter Calliess
Self-Constitutionalizing TNCs? On the Linkage of "Private" and "Public" Corporate Codes of Conduct
Gunther Teubner
The Coevolution of Transnational Corporations and Institutions
Sarianna M. Lundan
The Transnational Law Market, Regulatory Competition, and Transnational Corporations
Horst Eidenmuller
Private Actors and Public Governance Beyond the State: The Multinational Corporation, the Financial Stability Board, and the Global Governance Order
Larry Cata Backer
Transnational Corporations as Steering Subjects in International Economic Law: Two Competing Visions of the
Karsten Nowrot
Transnational Corporations, Global Competition Policy, and the Shortcomings of Private International Law
Gralf-Peter Calliess and Jens Mertens
Notes
Money Can't Buy You Law: The Effects of Foreign Aid on the Rule of Law in Developing Countries
Katherine Erbeznik
Book Reviews