- Jeremy Farrall & Kim Rubenstein, Introduction: Filling or falling between the cracks? Law's potential
- Peter G. Danchin, Whose public? Which law? Mapping the internal/external distinction in international law
- Charles Sampford, The potential for a post-Westphalian convergence of 'Public Law' and 'Public International Law'
- Simon Chesterman, Globalisation and public law: a global administrative law?
- Devika Hovell, The deliberative deficit: transparency, access to information and UN sanctions
- Hitoshi Nasu, Who guards the guardian? Towards regulation of the UN security council's chapter VII powers through dialogue
- Erika de Wet, Holding the United Nations security council accountable for human rights violations through domestic and regional courts: a case of 'Be Careful What You Wish For'?
- Kevin Boreham, 'A Delicate Business': did AWB's kickbacks to Iraq under the United Nations Oil-For-Food Programme constitute a violation of Australia's international obligations?
- Jeremy Farrall, Should the United Nations security council leave it to the experts? The governance and accountability of UN sanctions monitoring
- Justine Nolan, The nexus between human rights and business: defining the sphere of corporate responsibility
- Linda Botterill & Anne McNaughton, At the intersection of international and municipal law: the case of Commissioner Cole and the Wheat Export Authority
- Stephen Tully, International legal advisers and transnational corporations: untangling roles and responsibilities for sanctions compliance
- Vivien Holmes, What is the right thing to do? Reflections on the AWB scandal and legal ethics
- Daniel Stewart, Who's responsible? Justiciability of private and political decisions
- Richard Mulgan, AWB and oil for food: some issues of accountability
- Simon Rice, Discriminating for world peace
- Angus Francis, Removing barriers to protection at the exported border: visas, carrier sanctions, and international obligation
- Thomas Pogge, Concluding remarks
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Farrall & Rubenstein: Sanctions, Accountability and Governance in a Globalised World
Jeremy Farrall (Australian National Univ. - Centre for International Governance & Justice) & Kim Rubenstein (Australian National Univ. - Law) have published Sanctions, Accountability and Governance in a Globalised World (Cambridge Univ. Press 2009). Contents include: