Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In legal terms, the question is whether to recognize and define an odious debt defense through a treaty or national legislative acts, on the one hand, or through the decisions of authoritative dispute-settlement bodies, whether international arbitral organs or domestic courts. Moreover, others may think that odious debt doctrine as a means can optimize the social welfare generated by sovereign-debt contracts. Here, Stephan examines the social welfare in the economic sense but attacks the problem from a different direction and concludes that no satisfactory mechanism exists for instituting an odious debt doctrine
Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt ...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
Choi and Posner indicate that it is unclear whether the doctrine will improve the welfare of the pop...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
When a corrupt governmental regime borrows money in the name of the state, and then steals or squand...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 revived public and academic debate about a wobbly old doctrine of in...
Politicians as well as many members of the international human-rights community, view the odious deb...
In the eighty years since Alexander Sack coined the phrase odious debt, academics and activists ha...
Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt ...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
Sovereigns incur debts, and creditors look to the law to hold sovereigns to their obligations. In le...
Choi and Posner indicate that it is unclear whether the doctrine will improve the welfare of the pop...
Odious debts are debts incurred by the government of a nation without either popular consent or a le...
When a corrupt governmental regime borrows money in the name of the state, and then steals or squand...
In a sense, all debts are odious; that is, to use dictionary definitions, hateful; disgusting; offe...
This Article looks at the generally agreed upon characteristics of the odious debt doctrine and co...
Current odious debt doctrine– using the term “doctrine” loosely, since it has never formally been ad...
Odious debts have been the subject of debate in academic, activist, and policymaking circles in rec...
Some sovereign debt, such as that of apartheid South Africa, is incurred without the consent of the ...
The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 revived public and academic debate about a wobbly old doctrine of in...
Politicians as well as many members of the international human-rights community, view the odious deb...
In the eighty years since Alexander Sack coined the phrase odious debt, academics and activists ha...
Backer examines how the traditional notion of odious debt as a method of repudiating sovereign debt ...
Odious debt is more of a literature than a doctrine. Going back to at least the 1920s, one can find ...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...