Transnational law currently appears fragmented and captured by self-interested corporate actors. Good faith is at the heart of this fragmentation. To defend transnational law thus requires an account of good faith. Good Faith in Transnational Law explains and recasts fragmentation and capture as something valuable, and casts good faith as an obligation of other-regarding communicative conduct. Frédéric Gilles Sourgens argues that the fragmentation we experience is a virtue: for communication across vastly different commercial, economic, social, cultural and linguistic contexts to remain legally meaningful, we must translate our different expectations into a shared, context-bound idiom. He argues that law harnesses stress of such translations through stress fields that reintegrate the different experiences in a shared transnational discourse.
Saturday, October 8, 2022
Sourgens: Good Faith in Transnational Law: A Pluralist Account
Frédéric Gilles Sourgens (Washburn Univ. - Law) has published Good Faith in Transnational Law: A Pluralist Account (Brill | Nijhoff 2022). Here's the abstract: