The 1980s and early 1990s have witnessed the extraordinary demise of authoritarian regimes once thought to be a permanent fixture of the political landscape. Defying old orthodoxies and alliances, communist governments in Eastern Europe, military juntas in Latin America, and one-party states in Africa have given way to governments chosen in free and open elections. A tide of democratic change is sweeping the world, Professor Rustow recently declared, and the numbers bear him out. At the turn of the century only nine countries could legitimately be called democratic, even excluding the question of women\u27s suffrage. The number rose to twenty-one by 1929 and twenty-nine by 1960. By 1990, according to one survey, sixty-five countries cho...
Abstract: After the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, democratic Zeitgeist s...
In 1992 the American Journal of International Law published an article by Tom Franck entitled ‘The E...
This paper will first look at the traditional concept of sovereignty and the undemocratic features o...
The 1980s and early 1990s have witnessed the extraordinary demise of authoritarian regimes once thou...
This chapter concurs with the contention that the prescriptions as to how power must be exercised at...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
The language of democracy has become common in international law, the legal system that regulates re...
This book considers how the post-Cold War democratic revolution has affected international law. Trad...
In the 1990s, international legal scholarship was marked by democratic idealism and the belief that ...
In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Berlin wall, legal scholars initiated a debate on the exis...
The theory and practice of democracy as a system of governing has had more critics than advocates; f...
In the historical context, during the Cold War, due to the tension of ideology between countries, th...
This article argues that the years 1989-2010 can be hailed as an unprecedented epoch of internationa...
The 1980s registered a widespread expansion of electoral democracy around the world. Mainstream soci...
The concept of democracy was introduced in international law after the Cold War. If democracy is to ...
Abstract: After the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, democratic Zeitgeist s...
In 1992 the American Journal of International Law published an article by Tom Franck entitled ‘The E...
This paper will first look at the traditional concept of sovereignty and the undemocratic features o...
The 1980s and early 1990s have witnessed the extraordinary demise of authoritarian regimes once thou...
This chapter concurs with the contention that the prescriptions as to how power must be exercised at...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
The language of democracy has become common in international law, the legal system that regulates re...
This book considers how the post-Cold War democratic revolution has affected international law. Trad...
In the 1990s, international legal scholarship was marked by democratic idealism and the belief that ...
In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Berlin wall, legal scholars initiated a debate on the exis...
The theory and practice of democracy as a system of governing has had more critics than advocates; f...
In the historical context, during the Cold War, due to the tension of ideology between countries, th...
This article argues that the years 1989-2010 can be hailed as an unprecedented epoch of internationa...
The 1980s registered a widespread expansion of electoral democracy around the world. Mainstream soci...
The concept of democracy was introduced in international law after the Cold War. If democracy is to ...
Abstract: After the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, democratic Zeitgeist s...
In 1992 the American Journal of International Law published an article by Tom Franck entitled ‘The E...
This paper will first look at the traditional concept of sovereignty and the undemocratic features o...