Reflects on articles by D. Azaria, K. Daugirdas and O.C. Tassinis in E.J.I.L. 2020, 30(1) concerning various aspects of international law-making, and considers whether they are operating in a "political vacuum" that takes insufficient account of issues such as democracy and accountability.Peer reviewe
This article identifies how three dominant ideas of international law (as a process, an institution ...
This book tackles an old, but ever relevant question: does international law enjoy legal authority o...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
By laboring underneath the radar of formal law, using a diverse array of conceptual tools and workin...
Abstract: An Extraordinary Range of International Rules or Norms are Created Today Through Mech...
International law has always been contested. In recent years, however, competition between States to...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
Traditionally, the actors in the international legal sys-tem are divided into States and non-state a...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
The politics of international law are inextricably linked to the issue of governance. In this chapte...
The recent turn of politics and philosophy to serious appraisals of international law is welcome new...
This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary Internat...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
This article identifies how three dominant ideas of international law (as a process, an institution ...
This book tackles an old, but ever relevant question: does international law enjoy legal authority o...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
By laboring underneath the radar of formal law, using a diverse array of conceptual tools and workin...
Abstract: An Extraordinary Range of International Rules or Norms are Created Today Through Mech...
International law has always been contested. In recent years, however, competition between States to...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
Traditionally, the actors in the international legal sys-tem are divided into States and non-state a...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
The politics of international law are inextricably linked to the issue of governance. In this chapte...
The recent turn of politics and philosophy to serious appraisals of international law is welcome new...
This article (11, 596 words) was published in Europe’s premier journal of interdisciplinary Internat...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
This article identifies how three dominant ideas of international law (as a process, an institution ...
This book tackles an old, but ever relevant question: does international law enjoy legal authority o...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...