Starting with the Stimson Doctrine in the early 1930s, the international community has adopted, on numerous occasions, a policy of nonrecognition in response to international boundary changes gained through the use of force. Why? This article uses an investigation of the Manchurian Crisis to reconceptualize nonrecognition as a symbolic sanction against a norm violation. Existing accounts often view symbolic sanctions like nonrecognition as either failed attempts at coercion or mere posturing for domestic audiences. Against this view, this article explains how collective symbolic sanctions create or recreate common knowledge of what the rules of international behavior are in the face of a lack of effective rule enforcement. This common knowl...
Scholars debate the ambitions and policies of today’s ‘rising powers’ and the extent to which they a...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
si tu veux la paix, connais la guerre History repeats itself and war invariably brings tragedy to t...
Why do states refuse to recognize the spoils of war? In previous eras concessions imposed on a defea...
Why do so many states adopt a position of non-recognition of gains from war? Despite being proven...
In the past two decades, a series of major multilateral treaties were created in the absence of supp...
The prohibition on territorial conquest is a cornerstone of the international legal order. The Unite...
International norms change over time, but we do not fully understand how and why they evolve as they...
This chapter uses the League’s management of the Manchurian Crisis as a source for understanding the...
This thesis addresses the issue of non-compliance with international norms, namely the Geneva Conven...
This Article examines the use of alternative sanctions in international law using the exemplar of th...
How do international norms evolve? In the modern era, the critically important norm of sovereignty h...
This article studies a conflict over two competing norms in which the actors demonstrated incompatib...
The 1990’s did not only see the end of the Cold War, it experienced several man-made humanitarian cr...
A puzzle is presented by the interbellum difference in the Japanese treatment of prisoners of war fr...
Scholars debate the ambitions and policies of today’s ‘rising powers’ and the extent to which they a...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
si tu veux la paix, connais la guerre History repeats itself and war invariably brings tragedy to t...
Why do states refuse to recognize the spoils of war? In previous eras concessions imposed on a defea...
Why do so many states adopt a position of non-recognition of gains from war? Despite being proven...
In the past two decades, a series of major multilateral treaties were created in the absence of supp...
The prohibition on territorial conquest is a cornerstone of the international legal order. The Unite...
International norms change over time, but we do not fully understand how and why they evolve as they...
This chapter uses the League’s management of the Manchurian Crisis as a source for understanding the...
This thesis addresses the issue of non-compliance with international norms, namely the Geneva Conven...
This Article examines the use of alternative sanctions in international law using the exemplar of th...
How do international norms evolve? In the modern era, the critically important norm of sovereignty h...
This article studies a conflict over two competing norms in which the actors demonstrated incompatib...
The 1990’s did not only see the end of the Cold War, it experienced several man-made humanitarian cr...
A puzzle is presented by the interbellum difference in the Japanese treatment of prisoners of war fr...
Scholars debate the ambitions and policies of today’s ‘rising powers’ and the extent to which they a...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
si tu veux la paix, connais la guerre History repeats itself and war invariably brings tragedy to t...