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Intro; Préface/Preface; Contents; Part I / Partie I: Keynote Speeches / Leçons Inaugurale et de Clôture; The Multiple Facets of Law Enforcement; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Substantive Law and Enforcement; 1.2 Characteristic Features of Enforcement Mechanisms; 2 Law Enforcement by Varying State Measures; 2.1 Survey; 2.2 The Case of Competition Law: Private, Public and Criminal Enforcement; 2.2.1 From Private to Public Enforcement; 2.2.2 From Public to Private Enforcement; 2.2.3 Criminal Enforcement; 2.3 The Case of Consumer Protection: Individual, Collective and Administrative Action
2.3.1 Limits of Traditional Enforcement Through Civil Courts2.3.2 Collective Actions; 2.3.3 Public Enforcement by State Authorities; 2.4 Conclusion on State Measures; 3 Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR); 3.1 Survey; 3.2 Arbitration; 3.3 Ombudsman Complaint Procedures; 3.3.1 Law Enforcement in Consumer Disputes; 3.3.2 ADR in the US and the EU; 3.4 Mediation and Conciliation; 4 Extra-Legal, Societal Enforcement Mechanisms; 4.1 The Advancement of Soft Law; 4.2 Enforcement and Compliance; 4.2.1 Support by State Law; 4.2.2 Societal Enforcement Mechanisms; 5 Conclusion; References
Enforcing Legal Norms Through Private Means1 Introduction; 2 Purely Personal Enforcement of Non-Binding Norms; 3 Law Enforcement Through Institutional or Organizational Structures; 4 Collective Private Law Creation and Enforcement; 5 Privately Developed Practices as Actual Private Law Norms; 6 Private Parties as Law Enforcement Actors; 7 Conclusion; References; Part II / Partie II: Round-Table Interventions / Interventions à lÓccasion des Tables-Rondes; A Global Adaptive System for Supporting Human Rights?; 1 Introduction; 2 What Is an ``Adaptive System?́́
3 The Global Adaptive System of Human Rights3.1 The Field; 3.2 Agents and Interactions; 3.2.1 States; 3.2.2 Transnational Organizations; 3.2.3 Nongovernment Organizations (NGOs); 3.2.4 Scholars and Journalists; 4 Some Consequences for Human Rights; 4.1 Increased Awareness; 4.2 Improved Access, Dialogue, and the Potential for Cooperation; 4.3 Changed Incentives; 4.4 Content and Framing of Human Rights Norms; 5 Potential Roles for Comparative Law Tools; 5.1 Patterning and Mapping; 5.2 Function and Context; 5.3 Voices/Formants; 5.4 Decisional Analysis; 6 Conclusions; References
Jurisdictional Conflicts in Criminal Matters and Their Settlement Within EUś Supranational Settings1 A Fundamental Starting Point; 2 Interests Behind Jurisdictional Conflicts in Criminal Matters and Their Resolution; 3 Settlement Models for Conflicts of Jurisdictions in Criminal Matters at the National Level; 4 Settlement Models for Conflicts of Jurisdiction in Criminal Matters at the International Level; 5 Resolving and Preventing Conflicts of Jurisdiction in Criminal Matters at a Supranational Level: The EU Approach: A Baffling...
2.3.1 Limits of Traditional Enforcement Through Civil Courts2.3.2 Collective Actions; 2.3.3 Public Enforcement by State Authorities; 2.4 Conclusion on State Measures; 3 Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR); 3.1 Survey; 3.2 Arbitration; 3.3 Ombudsman Complaint Procedures; 3.3.1 Law Enforcement in Consumer Disputes; 3.3.2 ADR in the US and the EU; 3.4 Mediation and Conciliation; 4 Extra-Legal, Societal Enforcement Mechanisms; 4.1 The Advancement of Soft Law; 4.2 Enforcement and Compliance; 4.2.1 Support by State Law; 4.2.2 Societal Enforcement Mechanisms; 5 Conclusion; References
Enforcing Legal Norms Through Private Means1 Introduction; 2 Purely Personal Enforcement of Non-Binding Norms; 3 Law Enforcement Through Institutional or Organizational Structures; 4 Collective Private Law Creation and Enforcement; 5 Privately Developed Practices as Actual Private Law Norms; 6 Private Parties as Law Enforcement Actors; 7 Conclusion; References; Part II / Partie II: Round-Table Interventions / Interventions à lÓccasion des Tables-Rondes; A Global Adaptive System for Supporting Human Rights?; 1 Introduction; 2 What Is an ``Adaptive System?́́
3 The Global Adaptive System of Human Rights3.1 The Field; 3.2 Agents and Interactions; 3.2.1 States; 3.2.2 Transnational Organizations; 3.2.3 Nongovernment Organizations (NGOs); 3.2.4 Scholars and Journalists; 4 Some Consequences for Human Rights; 4.1 Increased Awareness; 4.2 Improved Access, Dialogue, and the Potential for Cooperation; 4.3 Changed Incentives; 4.4 Content and Framing of Human Rights Norms; 5 Potential Roles for Comparative Law Tools; 5.1 Patterning and Mapping; 5.2 Function and Context; 5.3 Voices/Formants; 5.4 Decisional Analysis; 6 Conclusions; References
Jurisdictional Conflicts in Criminal Matters and Their Settlement Within EUś Supranational Settings1 A Fundamental Starting Point; 2 Interests Behind Jurisdictional Conflicts in Criminal Matters and Their Resolution; 3 Settlement Models for Conflicts of Jurisdictions in Criminal Matters at the National Level; 4 Settlement Models for Conflicts of Jurisdiction in Criminal Matters at the International Level; 5 Resolving and Preventing Conflicts of Jurisdiction in Criminal Matters at a Supranational Level: The EU Approach: A Baffling...