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This chapter explores the broader recognition and enforcement lessons that can be derived from transnational experience. In brief, I argue that although transnational recognition and enforcement approaches largely have their own distinct legal instrumentation and spheres of operation, they intersect in many significant respects, and can be said to be ‘transnationalised’. This is because they are drawn from a similar corpus of legal instrumentation and understanding, and developments in each approach have informed, and remain likely to inform, others.
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