Applying Municipal Law in International Disputes: A collection of law lectures in pocketbook form
In: The Pocket Books of the Hague Academy of International Law l[volume 56]
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In: The Pocket Books of the Hague Academy of International Law l[volume 56]
"This book explains how the knowledge economy, a seeming wonder for the world, has caused unintended harms that threaten peace and prosperity and undo international cooperation and the international rule of law. It also points to ways out of these crises"--
In: Sokol colloquium, volume 7
Foreign Court Judgments and the United States Legal System, edited by Paul B. Stephan, gathers essays from leading thinkers, scholars and practitioners in international law to address the recognition and enforcement of foreign court judgments in the United States legal system.
In: International business and economics [Hauptbd]
In: The Carl Beck papers in Russian and East European studies no. 805
In: Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Research Paper No. 2024-10
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In: International review of the Red Cross: humanitarian debate, law, policy, action, Band 104, Heft 920-921, S. 2077-2096
ISSN: 1607-5889
AbstractThis article offers a brief review of the forces that have contributed to the contemporary impasse in the formation of new international law and institutions. It identifies areas where development of the law of armed conflict would provide great benefits, yet where current international conditions render formal legal agreements highly unlikely. It then considers how to advance desirable projects nonetheless. In the absence of effective formal international law-making, jurists face a choice. One approach, which I call inspirational, is to propose idealized legal systems based on claims of justice and practicality. Much published work over the last decade seems to take this path. The hope is that the ideas will inspire and thus lead relevant actors to adopt the systems at a time when the obstacles to international agreements recede. The other approach, which I call entrepreneurial and describe here, involves leading States acting as "norm entrepreneurs". They can propound and in practice adhere to norms with the intention of inducing other States to follow. The entrepreneurial approach entails a State engaging in a practice that it hopes others will emulate, while the inspirational involves an appeal to the international community as a whole, including significant non-State actors.
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In: Virginia Journal of International Law, Vol. 62
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In: OXFORD HANDBOOK OF COMPARATIVE FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW 375 (Oxford University Press: New York, Curtis A. Bradley, editor 2019)
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In: Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Research Paper No. 2020-57
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In: THE COMMON LAW AND THE CIVIL LAW TODAY ‒ CONVERGENCE AND DIVERGENCE 1 (Vernon Press: Wilmington, Del., Marko Novakovic, editor 2019)
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In: THE LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT IN 2040 (Oxford University Press: New York, Matthew C. Waxman, ed. 2020)
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In: Law and Contemporary Problems, Forthcoming
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