i first conceived of this book when I was a Fellow at the School of Social
Science at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, New Jersey. Many
thanks to Danielle Allen, Joan Scott, and Michael Walzer for their gracious hospitality
and our countless conversations that shaped this project at its outset. I also
wish to thank my colleagues at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, an institution
with an unparalleled group of international legal scholars and legal theorists
from whom I have learned so much.
Over the years, I have had discussions about the various themes and arguments
that comprise this book with many friends and colleagues. Thanks to Roy Adams,
Andrew Arato, Jutta Brunée, Vincent Chiao, Jean Cohen, Dennis Davis, Ron
Daniels, David Dyzenhaus, Karen Engle, Willy Forbath, Evan Fox-Decent, Judy
Fudge, Michael Ignatieff, Karen Knop, Brian Langille, Frédéric Mégret, Ed Morgan,
Guy Mundlak, Anne Norton, Jennifer Orange, Umut ?zsu, Gaetano Pentassuglia,
Kerry Rittich, Michel Rosenfeld, Brad Roth, Andr?s Saj?, Kim Scheppele, Brian
Tamanaha, Bal?zs T?th, and Renata Uitz, as well as, of course, Michael Trebilcock,
for always advising to throw deep. Special thanks go to Patrick Healy, Courtney
Jung, Zoran Oklopcic, Arthur Ripstein, David Schneiderman, and the two anonymous
reviewers at Oxford University Press, all of whom read the entire manuscript
with care and provided me with invaluable comments and advice. I am also grateful
to Evan Rosevear and especially Patrick Healy for their research assistance, and
Nancy Bueler for her exceptional administrative assistance. I would also like to
thank the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, for providing
me with valuable research funding.