This chapter, forthcoming in the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Foreign Relations Law, considers two important and unresolved issues raised by unilateral withdrawal from or denunciation of treaties. The first issue concerns whether treaty obligations end in both international and domestic law after a state leaves a treaty. Exit often produces the same effects in both legal systems, but some withdrawals bifurcate a treaty’s status, ending its obligations in domestic law but continuing to bind the state internationally, or vice versa. The second issue concerns denunciations initiated by different branches of government. The decision to withdraw from a treaty is usually carried out by the executive acting unilaterally. Less well known, but pot...
This paper does not aim to reiterate the law of treaties as such. Rather, we focus on how the law of...
Scholars have long understood that the instability of power has ramifications for compliance with in...
Treaties are negotiated, usually written down, and often subject to cumbersome domestic ratification...
This chapter, forthcoming in the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Foreign Relations Law, considers two...
This Essay, a contribution to a symposium on Withdrawing from Customary International Law published ...
This essay, a contribution to an AJIL Unbound symposium on “Treaty Exit at the Interface of Domestic...
This Article analyzes the under-explored phenomenon of unilateral exit from international agreements...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022What leads states to exit from treaties? Is treaty exi...
This paper does not aim to reiterate the law of treaties as such. Rather, we focus on how the law of...
The viability of international law rests largely on the viability of treaties as a source of law. In...
Treaties, while operating primarily at international level, by definition require a legal connection...
This contribution to the Oxford Handbook on Comparative Foreign Relations considers how a state’s ap...
As a rule, treaties do not come to an end automatically but entitle the injured state or all states ...
The conventional wisdom among international law scholars is that, once a rule of customary internati...
Withdrawing from International Custom, a recent article by Curtis Bradley and Mitu Gulati, has spark...
This paper does not aim to reiterate the law of treaties as such. Rather, we focus on how the law of...
Scholars have long understood that the instability of power has ramifications for compliance with in...
Treaties are negotiated, usually written down, and often subject to cumbersome domestic ratification...
This chapter, forthcoming in the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Foreign Relations Law, considers two...
This Essay, a contribution to a symposium on Withdrawing from Customary International Law published ...
This essay, a contribution to an AJIL Unbound symposium on “Treaty Exit at the Interface of Domestic...
This Article analyzes the under-explored phenomenon of unilateral exit from international agreements...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022What leads states to exit from treaties? Is treaty exi...
This paper does not aim to reiterate the law of treaties as such. Rather, we focus on how the law of...
The viability of international law rests largely on the viability of treaties as a source of law. In...
Treaties, while operating primarily at international level, by definition require a legal connection...
This contribution to the Oxford Handbook on Comparative Foreign Relations considers how a state’s ap...
As a rule, treaties do not come to an end automatically but entitle the injured state or all states ...
The conventional wisdom among international law scholars is that, once a rule of customary internati...
Withdrawing from International Custom, a recent article by Curtis Bradley and Mitu Gulati, has spark...
This paper does not aim to reiterate the law of treaties as such. Rather, we focus on how the law of...
Scholars have long understood that the instability of power has ramifications for compliance with in...
Treaties are negotiated, usually written down, and often subject to cumbersome domestic ratification...