TY - JOUR AU - Petersmann, Ernst-Ulrich AB - Book Reviews  183 In conclusion, Petersmann begins his tome by warning the reader that the IEL ‘system established since the Second World War faces an unprecedented crisis requiring “new thinking”’ (p 1). His book succeeds in supplying the required new thinking ‘to reinterpret and redesign IEL by focusing on the human and constitu- tional rights of citizens, democratic self-governance based on transnational rule of law, and on consumer welfare as the major sources of legitimizing IEL’ (pp 512–13). Even with its groundbreaking conclusions, I do not know whether the brilliance of this book will lead to the establishment of a Petersmann School of IEL. All too often, scholars prefer to reinvent their own wheels. But I do predict that in the decades ahead, the IEL of the future will move up the path that Ulli Petersmann has so adroitly reasoned with us to follow. Steve Charnovitz George Washington University Law School doi:10.1093/jiel/jgu001 Advance Access Publication Date: 25 February 2014 Global Justice and International Economic Law: Three Takes. By FRANK J. GARCIA, Cambridge University Press, 2013. ISBN 9781107031920, 348 pages. In his excellent monograph on Trade, Inequality and Justice: Toward a Liberal Theory of Just Trade (Transnational Publishers, 2003), TI - Global Justice and International Economic Law: Three Takes. By Frank J. Garcia JF - Journal of International Economic Law DO - 10.1093/jiel/jgu007 DA - 2014-03-24 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/global-justice-and-international-economic-law-three-takes-by-frank-j-hsBit0RfNT SP - 183 EP - 189 VL - 17 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -