When a country signs an international treaty, it is not the government but the state that is bound, and the obligation will stand until a subsequent government formally exits the treaty. Exit is presumed to be costly: a government that repudiates earlier treaty obligations will suffer reputational harm in its international relations. Moreover, this general background norm of international law applies as well to debt: a government can announce that it is renouncing debt, but it will suffer severe reputational harm in the debt marketplace, much as a government that repudiates public international law obligations suffers a reputational harm. Here, Ginsburg and Ulen talks about the odious debt and odious credit in relation to economic develop...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
When a country signs an international treaty, it is not the government but the state that is bound, ...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
Central to our understanding of sovereignty should be the competence of states to determine how thei...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
When a corrupt governmental regime borrows money in the name of the state, and then steals or squand...
Because of the way that the international lending system works, poor nations have been forced to rep...
Default on sovereign debt is a form of political risk. Issuers and creditors have responded to this ...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
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...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
When a country signs an international treaty, it is not the government but the state that is bound, ...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
Central to our understanding of sovereignty should be the competence of states to determine how thei...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
When a corrupt governmental regime borrows money in the name of the state, and then steals or squand...
Because of the way that the international lending system works, poor nations have been forced to rep...
Default on sovereign debt is a form of political risk. Issuers and creditors have responded to this ...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
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...
To most people, the notion that the citizens of a country lucky enough to have ousted a dictator sho...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...