Article
Spanish
ID: <
10670/1.m9vn0j>
Abstract
In Section I of this Article, the factors driving the emergence of the new transnational private sector are identified in comparison with, on the one hand, the law of the markets and, on the other, the international public system. In Section II, the discussion focuses on the private sphere, by analogy with the two conflicts of interest arising from the relationship between regulated and regulatory and the need for regulatory responses. In Section III, the complementarity between public and private schemes is analysed. In the light of this approximation in this text, the argument that there are differences between the public and the private sector at global level is supported. The difference between the public and the private sector is analysed by comparing the domestic and transnational spheres. Four different models are identified: hybridisation, regulatory creation by collaboration, coordination and competence. Section IV summarises the results of the analysis carried out, reconsidering the relationship between public and private at transnational level.