Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Gunther Teubner
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) FRANKFURT UNIVERSITY, GERMANY
ANO 2002
TIPO Article
PERIÓDICO European Journal of Social Theory
ISSN 1368-4310
E-ISSN 1461-7137
EDITORA SAGE Publications
DOI 10.1177/13684310222225414
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 cfc278aa9c320783260f89de2bdc0cb8
FORMATO PDF

Resumo

Globalization processes imply the self-deconstruction of the hierarchy of legal norms. Thus, legal pluralism is no longer only an issue for legal sociology, but becomes a challenge for legal practice itself. Traditionally, rule making by 'private regimes' has been subjugated under the hierarchical frame of the national constitution. When this frame breaks, then the new frame of legal institutions can only be heterarchical. The origin of global non-state law as a sequence of recursive legal operations is an 'as if', not only a founding myth as a self-observation of law, rather the legal fiction of concrete past operations. This fiction, however, depends on social conditions outside legal institutions, on a historical configuration in which it is sufficiently plausible to assume that in earlier times, too, legal rules were applied.

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