Buffalo Law Review
Document Type
Article
Abstract
This Essay seeks to explores the fertility of thinking about arbitration as a portal to stateless legal regimes. Using the distinction between law in books and law in action, as well as the concepts of social and political disembeddedness and quiet politics, it argues that under the current paradigm of arbitration, it operates as a porous portal, getting corporate and natural citizens to escape into stateless law-in-action legal regimes (though in practice not into a law-in-books stateless legal regime). This raises questions of control of and accountability for the political effects of such stateless law-inaction legal regimes on the rest of society.
Recommended Citation
Thomas Schultz,
The Workings of Legal Exceptionalism: Arbitration as a Portal to Stateless Law-in-Action Regimes,
72
Buff. L. Rev.
(2024).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.buffalo.edu/buffalolawreview/vol72/iss5/7
