International law is built on the foundation of state consent. A state’s legal obligations are overwhelmingly – some would say exclusively – based on its consent to be bound. This focus on consent offers maximal protection to individual states. If a country feels that a proposed change to international law does not serve its interests, it can avoid that change by withholding its agreement. This commitment to consent preserves the power of states, but it also creates a serious problem for the international system. Because any state can object to any proposed rule of international law, only changes that benefit every single affected state can be adopted. This creates a cumbersome status quo bias. Though legal reforms that would lead to...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
Rising legalization in the international community has lead to greater use of international tribun...
It is widely accepted that a state cannot treat a struggle with an organized non-state actor as an a...
According to many traditional accounts, one important difference between international and domestic ...
Sovereign States are under a legal obligation to comply with customary international law even though...
For over three decades, it has been the International Law Commission’s position that the circumstanc...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
There have been, however, many instances under traditional international legal theory when a state\u...
Like consent and estoppel, the concept of reasonableness, while failing to provide an adequate expla...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
International law is a largely consensual system, consisting of norms that states in sovereign equal...
While treaty norms only bind states that have explicitly consented to a treaty, the case is less cle...
In this article I make three related arguments. First, I argue that the traditional approach to the ...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
This article examines one of the most important trends in international legal governance since the e...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
Rising legalization in the international community has lead to greater use of international tribun...
It is widely accepted that a state cannot treat a struggle with an organized non-state actor as an a...
According to many traditional accounts, one important difference between international and domestic ...
Sovereign States are under a legal obligation to comply with customary international law even though...
For over three decades, it has been the International Law Commission’s position that the circumstanc...
In this paper we challenge the role of consent in the global order by discussing current modes of in...
There have been, however, many instances under traditional international legal theory when a state\u...
Like consent and estoppel, the concept of reasonableness, while failing to provide an adequate expla...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
International law is a largely consensual system, consisting of norms that states in sovereign equal...
While treaty norms only bind states that have explicitly consented to a treaty, the case is less cle...
In this article I make three related arguments. First, I argue that the traditional approach to the ...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
This article examines one of the most important trends in international legal governance since the e...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
Rising legalization in the international community has lead to greater use of international tribun...
It is widely accepted that a state cannot treat a struggle with an organized non-state actor as an a...