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Country report: Namibia's trade and investment climate
In: NEPRU working papers 24
Alcoholism. A comparison of treatment and advice, with a study of the influence of marriage
In: Maudsley monographs 26
The 2022 Annual Kirby Lecture in International Law: Why It's Time to Terminate the TRIPS Agreement
In: The Australian yearbook of international law, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 3-30
ISSN: 2666-0229
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Rate Base the Charge Space: The Law of Utility EV Infrastructure Investment
In: Adam D. Orford, Rate Base the Charge Space: The Law of Utility EV Infrastructure Investment, 48 Colum. J. of Evn't L. 1 (2022)
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Clean Air Act Section 115: Is the IPCC a 'Duly Constituted International Agency'?
In: Georgetown Environmental Law Review, Band 34, Heft 2, S. 2022
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Natural Gas and Net Zero: Mutually Exclusive Pathways for the Southeast
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Civil Wars: A History in Ideas. By David Armitage. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2017. Pp xi, 349. Index
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 115, Heft 4, S. 781-787
ISSN: 2161-7953
The Sir Elihu Lauterpacht International Law Lecture 2019: The Crisis of Liberal Internationalism and the Future of International Law
In: The Australian yearbook of international law, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 1-25
ISSN: 2666-0229
International Law and the Populist Moment: A Comment on Martti Koskenniemi's Enchanted by the Tools? International Law and Enlightenment
In: Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting, Band 113, S. 21-29
ISSN: 2169-1118
Community psychology against militarism
In: Community Psychology in Global Perspective; Vol 5, No 1 (2019): Community Psychology in Global Perspective - Special Issue: Emerging challenges of European Community Psychology; 107-118 ; Community psychology in global perspective. Interculture, well-being and social change; Vol 5, No 1 (2019): Community Psychology in Global Perspective - Special Issue: Emerging challenges of European Community Psychology; 107-118
The full costs of armed conflict are enormous and total world military expenditure is huge. Psychological theories and concepts to explain support for war and militarism at individual and group levels include: warfare as a masculine institution; social identity theory; nationalist versus internationalist attitudes; and the contact hypothesis. At a collective level militarism is legitimised. War and deadly weapons are portrayed in positive and unrealistic ways. Support for militarism permeates civic society and citizens are 'cognitively disarmed' about it and the role they play in supporting it. Psychologists have promoting militarism by working for the military and the changing nature of war and armaments, such as the use of drones, is providing further temptations to do so. Psychology has at best been ambivalent about militarism. Peace psychology has not taken an unambiguous position on it, often speaking of the absence of war in the absence of social justice as 'negative peace'. The British Psychological Society is failing to recognise and oppose militarism. Community psychology should take a lead in arguing for a more clearly identified Psychology Against Militarism (PAM).
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NATO, Regionalism, and the Responsibility to Protect
In: Ian Shapiro and Adam Tooze (eds), Charter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation together with Scholarly Commentaries and Essential Historical Documents (2016 Forthcoming)
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