Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odious regimes from arising, or stymie them once they do, is evident from the plethora of responses employed by the international community once a regime\u27s odiousness becomes clear. Current odious debt doctrine dates back to a 1927 treatise by a wandering Russian academic named Alexander Sack. The Sack definition contemplates a debt-by-debt approach to questionable borrowing. If a loan is used to benefit the population--to build a highway or water-treatment plant, for instance--the obligation would be fully enforceable, no matter how pernicious the borrower regime. Here, Bolton and Skeel attempt to fill the vacuum: a regime is odious if it en...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 revived public and academic debate about a wobbly old doctrine of in...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Odious regimes have always been with us. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent o...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
In the eighty years since Alexander Sack coined the phrase odious debt, academics and activists ha...
Iraq is paying off debt from Saddam Hussein’s rule. South Africa is paying off debt obligations incu...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 revived public and academic debate about a wobbly old doctrine of in...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odi...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Odious regimes have always been with us. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent o...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
In the eighty years since Alexander Sack coined the phrase odious debt, academics and activists ha...
Iraq is paying off debt from Saddam Hussein’s rule. South Africa is paying off debt obligations incu...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 revived public and academic debate about a wobbly old doctrine of in...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...