This essay will argue that even where disparate treaties converge doctrinally, they may diverge normatively and that normative divergence may be significant in its own right. Section I of this essay seeks to chart out an initial such analysis, conducting a concise comparison of particular rules affecting migrant workers from different realms of international law. Section I concludes with both a graphic representation of doctrinal convergences and divergences, and a further discussion the doctrinal relationships among treaties as elucidated through consideration of hypothetical legal disputes. Section II considers the normative implications of divergent rule systems. In particular, Section II raises the question of whether the rise of intern...
This paper asks how to study migrants' relationship with the legal system upon arrival in the host c...
Governments cannot ignore international human rights standards for unauthorized migrant workers fore...
Despite the broadening range of international arbiters of global migration, the state—with its sover...
This essay will argue that even where disparate treaties converge doctrinally, they may diverge norm...
This Paper tries to show the effects of a central challenge of contemporary global governance: the ...
This article examines how international human rights law is shaping the politics of immigration. It...
Systematic violations of the rights of unauthorized migrants on the fault lines between developed an...
Migration is a complex phenomenon: on the one hand, it encompasses economic, political, historical, ...
Many migration theories identify ‘the law’ as a significant constraint on the international movement...
This paper examines the transnational movement of law and legal pluralism in the transnational domai...
This article discusses the theoretical interaction between the economically grounded most-favoured n...
The following essay will focus attention on American legal scholarship concerning the admission of m...
This Article considers the impact of the Migrant Workers Convention on the human rights of women mig...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
The title of this timely and innovative new journal raises basic questions about the connection betw...
This paper asks how to study migrants' relationship with the legal system upon arrival in the host c...
Governments cannot ignore international human rights standards for unauthorized migrant workers fore...
Despite the broadening range of international arbiters of global migration, the state—with its sover...
This essay will argue that even where disparate treaties converge doctrinally, they may diverge norm...
This Paper tries to show the effects of a central challenge of contemporary global governance: the ...
This article examines how international human rights law is shaping the politics of immigration. It...
Systematic violations of the rights of unauthorized migrants on the fault lines between developed an...
Migration is a complex phenomenon: on the one hand, it encompasses economic, political, historical, ...
Many migration theories identify ‘the law’ as a significant constraint on the international movement...
This paper examines the transnational movement of law and legal pluralism in the transnational domai...
This article discusses the theoretical interaction between the economically grounded most-favoured n...
The following essay will focus attention on American legal scholarship concerning the admission of m...
This Article considers the impact of the Migrant Workers Convention on the human rights of women mig...
This article will take up the conversation about legal pluralism in the context of debates over tran...
The title of this timely and innovative new journal raises basic questions about the connection betw...
This paper asks how to study migrants' relationship with the legal system upon arrival in the host c...
Governments cannot ignore international human rights standards for unauthorized migrant workers fore...
Despite the broadening range of international arbiters of global migration, the state—with its sover...