Description: The Rule of Law Under Pressure provides readers with an accessible and richly detailed assessment of recent challenges to the rule of law. The rule of law is closely tied to both democracy and human rights. The erosion of the rule of law, within a rising number of countries and in international relations, places populations under increasingly authoritarian and rights-abusing governments and threatens to destabilize peaceful relations among states. The book brings conceptual clarity to this complex and multidimensional topic and assesses recent trends in the rule of law at both national and international levels. The opening chapter clearly sets out the key concepts and evaluates broad transnational trends in the rule of law. Succeeding chapters assess rule of law developments at the international level and within key countries around the world. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Brief description: Wayne Sandholtz is a political scientist specializing in international law, international courts, and human rights. Since 2012 he holds the John A. McCone Chair in International Relations at the University of Southern California. His most recent books include Prohibiting Plunder: How Norms Change (2007) and Research Handbook on the Politics of International Law (2017, co-editor).
Review Quotes: 'This ambitious book offers valuable new conceptual and empirical analysis of the rule of law and the understudied relationship between rule-of-law dynamics at the national and transnational levels. It is a timely contribution as we grapple with a global rule-of-law recession and contemporary manifestations of the age-old governance challenge of constraining arbitrary and destructive use of power.' Betsy Andersen, Executive Director, World Justice Project