Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- International law (5)
- BITs (2)
- Constitution (2)
- Criminal law (2)
- International Court of Justice (2)
-
- International Monetary Fund (2)
- Treaties (2)
- AJIL (1)
- American Journal of International Law (1)
- American Society of International Law Proceedings (1)
- Appeal (1)
- Appellate (1)
- Arbitrary (1)
- Arbitration (1)
- Article 21 (1)
- Article 31 (1)
- BIS (1)
- Bailouts (Government policy) (1)
- Bank for International Settlements (1)
- Bilateral Investment Treaties (1)
- Bilateral investment treaties (1)
- Bondholders (1)
- Bonds (1)
- Book review (1)
- CISG (1)
- Chapter 11 (1)
- Chicago Journal of International Law (1)
- Community (1)
- Conference of Parties (COP) (1)
- Constitutional adjudication (1)
Articles 31 - 32 of 32
Full-Text Articles in Law
Self-Enforcing International Agreements And The Limits Of Coercion, Robert E. Scott, Paul B. Stephan
Self-Enforcing International Agreements And The Limits Of Coercion, Robert E. Scott, Paul B. Stephan
Faculty Scholarship
International law provides an ideal context for studying the effects of freedom from coercion on cooperative behavior. To be sure, almost all academic discussions on the subject begin by asking whether international law constitutes "law." But the category of all "international law" is too big and heterogeneous to permit useful analysis. Whether to regard, say, the rules governing the conduct of war or international humanitarian law as "law" presents radically different issues than analyzing the legal character of the Treaty of Rome (the constitutive instrument of the European Community), or the Warsaw Convention (the instrument governing contracts for the carriage …
From Rethinking To Internationalizing Criminal Law, George P. Fletcher
From Rethinking To Internationalizing Criminal Law, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
Writing Rethinking Criminal Law ("Rethinking") was a gamble. No one had ever written a serious book on comparative criminal law – in English or in any other language. No one had ever addressed English-speaking readers with the argument that some other system of legal thought – espoused by a nation defeated in a major war just thirty years before – had a superior literature on criminal law and a more refined way of thinking about the structure of criminal offenses. No one had tried to present the system of criminal law as though it were a species of …