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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Nothing But The Truth? Transitional Regimes Confront The Past, Joan Fitzpatrick
Nothing But The Truth? Transitional Regimes Confront The Past, Joan Fitzpatrick
Michigan Journal of International Law
Review of Impunity and Human Rights in International Law and Practice (Naomi Roht-Arriaza ed.)
International Ethics For A New Era: The Problem Of The Kind World Policeman, Fernando R. Tesón
International Ethics For A New Era: The Problem Of The Kind World Policeman, Fernando R. Tesón
Michigan Journal of International Law
Review of American Hegemony: Political Morality in a One-Superpower World by Lea Brilmayer
Why Redraw The Map Of Africa: A Moral And Legal Inquiry, Makau Wa Mutua
Why Redraw The Map Of Africa: A Moral And Legal Inquiry, Makau Wa Mutua
Michigan Journal of International Law
The author argues in this Article that the post-colonial state, the uncritical successor of the colonial state, is doomed because it lacks basic moral legitimacy. Its normative and territorial construction on the African colonial state, itself a legal and moral nullity, is the fundamental reason for its failure. The author argues that, at independence, the West decolonized the colonial state, not the African peoples subject to it. In other words, the right to self-determination was exercised not by the victims of colonization but their victimizers, the elites who control the international state system.
Custom, Power, And The Power Of Rules, Michael Byers
Custom, Power, And The Power Of Rules, Michael Byers
Michigan Journal of International Law
This article begins by explaining briefly the differing perspectives which these two general categories of scholars - those who study international law and those who study international relations - have of international society generally, and of law and power more specifically. This article exposes the fact that power is an important but largely unnoticed subject of much international legal discourse and also canvasses attempts by international relations scholars to incorporate law into their understandings of power.