While Koh’s transnational legal process framework ushered in what has arguably become a
“new” New Haven School perspective on international law, that framework is
now being expanded in significant ways, reflecting an ever-deepening
pluralist orientation. This Part briefly describes some of the sites of study for a
pluralist approach to international law. This new scholarship, I have argued
elsewhere, begins to turn the focus of inquiry from “international law”—
traditionally conceived as state-to-state interactions—to “law and
globalization,” a more multivalent study