Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt may undergo a conceptual revolution as it changes focus from the illegitimacy of governments obtaining loans to the illegitimacy of the systems through which such loans are made and enforced generally. He focus his analysis on the conceptual framework Fidel Castro sought to introduce into the debate about the legitimacy of sovereign debt and the extent to which this reframing might influence international institutional approaches
Odious regimes have always been with us. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent o...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Choi and Posner indicate that it is unclear whether the doctrine will improve the welfare of the pop...
Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt ...
Following the United States\u27 invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq,\u27 the US government ar...
The odious debt doctrine has experienced renewed popularity in the past few years; it has been heral...
This article argues that the doctrine of Odious Debt, which has enjoyed a revival since the U.S. inv...
Politicians as well as many members of the international human-rights community, view the odious deb...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
Iraq is paying off debt from Saddam Hussein’s rule. South Africa is paying off debt obligations incu...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
Odious regimes have always been with us. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent o...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Choi and Posner indicate that it is unclear whether the doctrine will improve the welfare of the pop...
Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt ...
Following the United States\u27 invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq,\u27 the US government ar...
The odious debt doctrine has experienced renewed popularity in the past few years; it has been heral...
This article argues that the doctrine of Odious Debt, which has enjoyed a revival since the U.S. inv...
Politicians as well as many members of the international human-rights community, view the odious deb...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
Iraq is paying off debt from Saddam Hussein’s rule. South Africa is paying off debt obligations incu...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
Odious regimes have always been with us. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent o...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Choi and Posner indicate that it is unclear whether the doctrine will improve the welfare of the pop...