Global law is one of direct result of globalisation, which has created an increasingly complex legal system of a global scale. This thesis begins with a Bluefin tuna case, which showcases the dynamic and perplexity of institutions on a global scale. Further on this thesis focuses on new age, global policy-makers and the relations between them, while the lack of hierarchy between them narrates a new global reality in which law emerges transversally, oscillates and creates patterns and networks of rules, which underpin and affect every social aspect of our lives. A collection of policy-makers on a global scale are accompanied with technological solutions and algorithms, which lead towards algocracy and self-regulatory frameworks. The following suggests global law is pluralistic instead of monistic and takes on various different structures and forms, which gives way to complexity theory. It is through the lenses of complex adaptive systems, which allow us to get to know the true character of the global law and the network it presents in reality.
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