Recent Scholarship: This Week in Public International Law Scholarship
A juscogens.net weekly feature, This Week in Public International Law Scholarship highlights new and notable books and articles concerning public international law. For comments or suggestions, please contact [email protected].
Books:
Desmond Dinan (ed.), Origins and Evolution of the EU
Lavanya Rajamani, Differential Treatment in International Environmental Law
Ole Kristian Fauchald and Jacob Werksman (eds.), Yearbook of International Environmental Law, Volume 15, 2004
Articles:
Ocean Development and International Law, Volume 37, Number 1, January-March 2006
- Timothy C. Perry, Blurring the Ocean Zones: The Effect of the Proliferation Security Initiative on the Customary International Law of the Sea
Law and Contemporary Problems, Volume 68, Numbers 3 & 4, Summer/Autumn 2005
- David Dyzenhaus, The Rule of (Administrative) Law in International Law
Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, Volume 44, Number 1, 2005
- David Kaye, Adjudicating Self-Defense: Discretion, Perception, and the Resort to Force in International Law David Kaye
- Wayne Sandholtz, The Iraqi National Museum and International Law: A Duty to Protect
International and Comparative Law Quarterly (United Kingdom), Volume 55, Number 1, January 2006
- Alex Mills, The Private History of International Law
- Joanna Harrington, Scrutiny and Approval: The Role for Westminster-Style Parliaments in Treaty-Making
- Michael Bohlander, Referring an Indictment from the ICTY and ICTR to another Court--Rule 11Bis and the Consequences for the Law of Extradition
- Matthew Happold, Darfur, the Security Council, and the International Criminal Court
Cornell International Law Journal, Volume 38, Number 3, Fall 2005
SYMPOSIUM - Miloševic & Hussein on Trial
- Geoffrey Robertson, QC, Ending Impunity: How International Criminal Law Can Put Tyrants on Trial
PANEL 1: Global or Local Justice: Who Should Try Ousted Leaders?
- Farhad Malekian, Emasculating the Philosophy of International Criminal Justice in the Iraqi Special Tribunal
- Frédéric Mégret, In Defense of Hybridity: Towards a Representational Theory of International Criminal Justice
- Jeremy Rabkin , Global Criminal Justice: An Idea Whose Time Has Passed
- Ruth Wedgwood, Address to the Cornell International Law Journal Symposium: Miloševic & Hussein on Trial
PANEL 2: Perspectives on Transitional Justice: Collective Memory, Command Responsibility, and the Political Psychology of Leadership
- Nataša Kandic, The ICTY Trials and Transitional Justice in Former Yugoslavia
- Mark J. Osiel, Modes of Participation in Mass Atrocity
- Jerrold M. Post & Lara K. Panis, Tyranny on Trial: Personality and Courtroom Conduct of Defendants Slobodan Miloševic and Saddam Hussein
- Ruti Teitel, The Law and Politics of Contemporary Transitional Justice
PANEL 3: The Trial Process: Prosecution, Defense, and Investigation
- Michael A. Newton, The Iraqi Special Tribunal: A Human Rights Perspective
- Tom Parker, Prosecuting Saddam: The Coalition Provisional Authority and the Evolution of the Iraqi Special Tribunal
- Michael P. Scharf & Ahran Kang, Errors and Missteps: Key Lessons the Iraqi Special Tribunal Can Learn from the ICTY, ICTR, and SCSL
- Mikhail Wladimiroff, Former Heads of State on Trial
PERSPECTIVES
- Payam Akhavan, Justice, Power, and the Realities of Interdependence: Lessons from the Miloševic and Hussein Trials
- Michael J. Kelly, The Tricky Nature of Proving Genocide Against Saddam Hussein Before the Iraqi Special Tribunal
- Alfred P. Rubin, Miloševic and Hussein on Trial