Article
Publicly Available
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Published/Copyright:
September 28, 2017
Published Online: 2017-9-28
Published in Print: 2017-9-27
© 2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Law and Development as a Field of Study: Connecting Law with Development
- Development and the Rule of Law
- Human Rights for Women in Liberia (and West Africa): Integrating Formal and Informal Rule of Law Reforms through the Carter Center’s Community Justice Advisor Project
- Overcoming Extreme Poverty by Social Protection Floors – Approaches to Closing the Right to Social Security Gap
- Profit, Persuasion, and Fidelity: Why People Follow the Rule of Law
- Justice and the Common Good in Dispute Resolution Discourse in the United States and the People’s Republic of China
- Developmental State
- The Power to Judge, the Power to Act: the Argentine Supreme Court as a Policymaker
- Developmental State No Birth Right: South Africa’s Post-1994 Economic Development Story
- Development and Environment
- Multilateral Development Banks and Sustainable Development: On Emulation, Fragmentation and a Common Law of Sustainable Development
- Environmental Degradation and Economic Development in China: An Interrelated Governance Challenge
- Trade, Investment, and Regional Integration
- The (mis)use of development in international investment law: understanding the jurist’s limits to work with development issues
- Corruption and Development
- Creating an anti-corruption norm in Africa: Critical reflections on legal instrumentalization for development
- Clientelism, Law and Politics. Considerations in the Light of the Argentine Case
- Rising Issues
- The Role of Copyright in Creative Industry Development
- Foreign Aid Reciprocity Agreements: Committing Developing Countries to Improve the Effectiveness of Aid When They Become Donors
- Helping Working Children through Consumocratic LawA Global South Perspective
- Book Review
- Sung-Hee Jwa: A General Theory of Economic Development: Towards a Capitalist Manifesto – A Critical Review