This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequences for the treaty design, treaty participation, and treaty adherence decisions of nation states. Grounding treaties upon the formal consent of states has numerous advantages for a decentralized and largely anarchic international legal system that suffers from a pervasive “compliance deficit.” But consent also has real costs, including the inability to ensure that all nations affected by transborder problems join treaties that seek to resolve those problems. This “participation deficit” helps explain why some international rules bind countries without their acceptance or approval. Such rules have wide applicability. But they can also increase...
When a state undertakes conflicting treaty obligations are both treaties binding, or is the second p...
In much of the scholarly literature on international law, there is a tendency to condemn violations ...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
This Article analyzes the under-explored phenomenon of unilateral exit from international agreements...
The treaty process specified in Article II of the Constitution has been dying a slow death for decad...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The United States participation in treaties and other international agreements is becoming more nece...
It is generally held that states interact with one another in a state of anarchy, at least when it c...
Global Constitutional Lawmaking Abstract This article identifies a nascent phenomenon of “global con...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Conventionally, customary international law is developed through the actions and beliefs of nations....
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Treaties have evolved significantly since the ratification of the United States Constitution, leadin...
Ever since Grotius first suggested that desire for esteem from the broader global community motivate...
When a state undertakes conflicting treaty obligations are both treaties binding, or is the second p...
In much of the scholarly literature on international law, there is a tendency to condemn violations ...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...
This article documents the rise of nonconsensual international lawmaking and analyzes its consequenc...
This Article analyzes the under-explored phenomenon of unilateral exit from international agreements...
The treaty process specified in Article II of the Constitution has been dying a slow death for decad...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The United States participation in treaties and other international agreements is becoming more nece...
It is generally held that states interact with one another in a state of anarchy, at least when it c...
Global Constitutional Lawmaking Abstract This article identifies a nascent phenomenon of “global con...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Conventionally, customary international law is developed through the actions and beliefs of nations....
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
Treaties have evolved significantly since the ratification of the United States Constitution, leadin...
Ever since Grotius first suggested that desire for esteem from the broader global community motivate...
When a state undertakes conflicting treaty obligations are both treaties binding, or is the second p...
In much of the scholarly literature on international law, there is a tendency to condemn violations ...
This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations...