International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within international relations. Two trends are evident in the recent literature. First, the obsession with theoretical labels is on the decline. Second, empirical, especially quantitative, work is burgeoning. This article reviews the literature in four issues areas — security, war, and peace; international trade; protection of the environment; and human rights — and concludes we have a much stronger basis for assessing claims about compliance and violation now than was the case only a few years ago. Still, the literature suffers from a few weaknesses, including problems of selection and endogeneity of treaties themselves and an enduring state-centric focus,...
The erosion of sovereignty that is said to characterize globalization is not generally associated ...
textInternational treaties consist of horizontal obligations between two or more states and are enfo...
The authors thank Neil Malhotra, Ken Schultz, Mike Tomz and the participants in the Stanford Interna...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The viability of international law rests largely on the viability of treaties as a source of law. In...
States regularly proclaim the sanctity of treaty obligations and few principles are as firmly establ...
The conventional wisdom in international law is that dispute resolution institutions sharpen the rep...
!e United States justi ably prides itself on its devotion to “the rule of law.” We take legal instru...
The conceptual, and more recently empirical, study of compliance has become a central preoccupation,...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
This project examines the untapped area of international legal engagement and the dynamic ways that ...
The inconsistencies, and conflicting theories of treaty interpretation, constitute the foundation fo...
Ever since Grotius first suggested that desire for esteem from the broader global community motivate...
The erosion of sovereignty that is said to characterize globalization is not generally associated ...
textInternational treaties consist of horizontal obligations between two or more states and are enfo...
The authors thank Neil Malhotra, Ken Schultz, Mike Tomz and the participants in the Stanford Interna...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The viability of international law rests largely on the viability of treaties as a source of law. In...
States regularly proclaim the sanctity of treaty obligations and few principles are as firmly establ...
The conventional wisdom in international law is that dispute resolution institutions sharpen the rep...
!e United States justi ably prides itself on its devotion to “the rule of law.” We take legal instru...
The conceptual, and more recently empirical, study of compliance has become a central preoccupation,...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
This project examines the untapped area of international legal engagement and the dynamic ways that ...
The inconsistencies, and conflicting theories of treaty interpretation, constitute the foundation fo...
Ever since Grotius first suggested that desire for esteem from the broader global community motivate...
The erosion of sovereignty that is said to characterize globalization is not generally associated ...
textInternational treaties consist of horizontal obligations between two or more states and are enfo...
The authors thank Neil Malhotra, Ken Schultz, Mike Tomz and the participants in the Stanford Interna...