Description
Explores how expert bodies and non-state empowered professionals come together to shape human rights law.
About the Author
Nina Reiners is a postdoctoral researcher in International Relations at the University of Potsdam. She is associated with the Berlin-Potsdam research group 'International Rule of Law,' and the Global Governance Centre at the Graduate Institute, Geneva. She received the Best Dissertation Award from the United Nations Association of Germany (DGVN) and was first finalist for the Best Dissertation Award from the Human Rights Section of the International Studies Association (ISA) in 2019.
Reviews
'Nina Reiners offers a fresh and insightful look into how 'transnational lawmaking coalitions' (TLCs) can expand the impact of human rights treaties. Composed of state-nominated experts and independent professionals, TLCs produce the general comments that sometimes open new domains of rights. The book tells the story of how expert bodies and unpaid issue professionals have expanded international human rights law. Reiners has illuminated a surprisingly little-known phenomenon.' Wayne Sandholtz, University of Southern California
'While international organizations increasingly involve non-state actors, it has remained an open question whether and how such actors also influence law and politics. In this carefully researched book, Nina Reiners offers a novel and compelling account of how transnational coalitions of experts shape the interpretation of UN human rights treaties. A must-read for students of both international law and international relations.' Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University
'This volume offers fascinating insights into the norm power of independent experts, the dialectics of international law, and the expansion of rights through treaty bodies. The agency of transnational lawmaking coalitions offers hope for renewing the rights regime in a changing world.' Alison Brysk, University of California, Santa Barbara
'Reiners' book is rich in detail and a real delight to read for anyone interested in the human rights machinery of the UN, the making and innovation of human rights law and the central protagonists behind this process. It opens up numerous fruitful and interesting lines of inquiry which will inspire new scholarship on international law, transnational elites and professionals, and the transformation of authority in international relations. With transnational lawmaking coalitions, Reiners has offered scholars a very interesting and apt concept which captures the heterogeneity of international human rights lawmaking.' Alvina Hoffmann, Global Policy
Book Information
ISBN 9781108845540
Author Nina Reiners
Format Hardback
Page Count 216
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 470g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 157mm * 20mm