Recent Scholarship: This Week in Public International Law Scholarship
A new juscogens.net feature, This Week in Public International Law Scholarship highlights new and notable books and articles concerning public international law.
Books:
Philip Allott, Towards the International Rule of Law: Essays in Integrated Constitutional Theory
Ustinia Dolgopol & Judith Gardam, eds., The Challenge of Conflict: International Law Responds
Christian J. Tams, Enforcing Obligations Erga Omnes in International Law
Articles:
Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Volume 34, Number 1, Fall 2005
- James Thuo Gathii, Foreign Precedents in the Federal Judiciary: The Case of the World Trade Organizations DSB Decisions
University of Chicago Law Review, Volume 72, Number 4, Fall 2005
- Rosa Ehrenreich Brooks, Failed States, or the State as Failure?
International Criminal Law Review (Netherlands), Volume 5, Number 4, December 2005
- Stefania Negri, The Principle of "Equality of Arms" and the Evolving Law of International Criminal Procedure
- Neelanjan Maitra, A Perpetual Possibility? The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda's Recognition of the Genocide of 1994
Tulane European and Civil Law Forum, Volume 20, 2005
- Clemens Rieder, Protecting Human Rights Within the European Union: Who Is Better Qualified to Do the Job-- the European Court of Justice or the European Court of Human Rights?
Georgetown Journal of International Law, Volume 36, Number 4, Summer 2005
- Amichai Cohen, Bureaucratic Internalization: Domestic Governmental Agencies and the Legitimization of International Law