The language of democracy has become common in international law, the legal system that regulates relations between nation states. This interest in democracy has however largely ignored democracy at the international level and focused instead on national democratic standards. In this paper, I start by sketching the threadbare debates about democracy beyond political borders in international law and then turn to the way that international institutions have developed this concept, particularly in the peace and state-building boom associated with the end of the Cold War. The two contexts for democracy have taken different directions. In the case of democracy at the international level, the discussion has become polarised between global North a...
This article argues that the years 1989-2010 can be hailed as an unprecedented epoch of internationa...
At the end of the Cold War some scholars argued that democracy is the only legitimate political syst...
It is often assumed that democracy is both desirable and possible in global politics. Interrogating ...
This chapter explores the conceptual politics of democracy in the area of international law and the ...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
This book considers how the post-Cold War democratic revolution has affected international law. Trad...
The theory and practice of democracy as a system of governing has had more critics than advocates; f...
The concept of democracy was introduced in international law after the Cold War. If democracy is to ...
In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Berlin wall, legal scholars initiated a debate on the exis...
This chapter concurs with the contention that the prescriptions as to how power must be exercised at...
This article is concerned with the questions of the role of law and international courts in the new ...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
In the historical context, during the Cold War, due to the tension of ideology between countries, th...
For lawyers in general, and international lawyers in particular, democracy is a neglected concept. D...
The question we are asked to address is as follows: Is international law a threat to democracy? As...
This article argues that the years 1989-2010 can be hailed as an unprecedented epoch of internationa...
At the end of the Cold War some scholars argued that democracy is the only legitimate political syst...
It is often assumed that democracy is both desirable and possible in global politics. Interrogating ...
This chapter explores the conceptual politics of democracy in the area of international law and the ...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
This book considers how the post-Cold War democratic revolution has affected international law. Trad...
The theory and practice of democracy as a system of governing has had more critics than advocates; f...
The concept of democracy was introduced in international law after the Cold War. If democracy is to ...
In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Berlin wall, legal scholars initiated a debate on the exis...
This chapter concurs with the contention that the prescriptions as to how power must be exercised at...
This article is concerned with the questions of the role of law and international courts in the new ...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
In the historical context, during the Cold War, due to the tension of ideology between countries, th...
For lawyers in general, and international lawyers in particular, democracy is a neglected concept. D...
The question we are asked to address is as follows: Is international law a threat to democracy? As...
This article argues that the years 1989-2010 can be hailed as an unprecedented epoch of internationa...
At the end of the Cold War some scholars argued that democracy is the only legitimate political syst...
It is often assumed that democracy is both desirable and possible in global politics. Interrogating ...