This Article challenges the conventional wisdom that states are always free to choose whether to participate in multilateral regimes. International law often mandates multilateralism to ensure that state laws and practices are compatible with sovereign equality and joint stewardship. The Article maps mandatory multilateralism\u27s domain, defines its requirements, and examines its application to three controversies: the South China Sea dispute, the United States\u27 withdrawal from the 2015 Paris Agreement, and Bolivia\u27s case against Chile in the International Court of Justice
This article examines the multiple layers at which international law now functions--the internationa...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
Multilateralism today faces numerous challenges. This article offers some reflections on those chall...
This Article challenges the conventional wisdom that states are always free to choose whether to par...
Multilateralism has become a norm of interstate relations and a defining characteristic of the inter...
Since the creation of United Nations system, actors in world politics have relied even more on the c...
Unilateralism and multilateralism both describe nations' foreign policy. They describe how nations i...
This essay analyses the consequences of contested multilateralism (CM) for the level of constitution...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
When a state makes a reservation to an existing or proposed multilateral treaty, it takes exception ...
The future of international lawmaking is in peril. Both trade and climate negotiations have failed t...
In the remainder of this essay I explore several issues raised by the linkages between sovereignty a...
In this article, the author draws on long engagement with multilateralism, both in domestic jurisdic...
This article uses the Convention on Cybercrime as a case study to illustrate the functional integrat...
A fierce debate ensues among leading international law theorists that implicates the role of nationa...
This article examines the multiple layers at which international law now functions--the internationa...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
Multilateralism today faces numerous challenges. This article offers some reflections on those chall...
This Article challenges the conventional wisdom that states are always free to choose whether to par...
Multilateralism has become a norm of interstate relations and a defining characteristic of the inter...
Since the creation of United Nations system, actors in world politics have relied even more on the c...
Unilateralism and multilateralism both describe nations' foreign policy. They describe how nations i...
This essay analyses the consequences of contested multilateralism (CM) for the level of constitution...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
When a state makes a reservation to an existing or proposed multilateral treaty, it takes exception ...
The future of international lawmaking is in peril. Both trade and climate negotiations have failed t...
In the remainder of this essay I explore several issues raised by the linkages between sovereignty a...
In this article, the author draws on long engagement with multilateralism, both in domestic jurisdic...
This article uses the Convention on Cybercrime as a case study to illustrate the functional integrat...
A fierce debate ensues among leading international law theorists that implicates the role of nationa...
This article examines the multiple layers at which international law now functions--the internationa...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
Multilateralism today faces numerous challenges. This article offers some reflections on those chall...