- Jean-Marc Coicaud, Introduction: fault lines of international legitimacy
- Jean-Marc Coicaud, The structure of legitimacy in contemporary international politics
- Jean-Marc Coicaud, Deconstructing international legitimacy
- Jean-Marc Coicaud, The evolution of international order and fault lines of international legitimacy
- Nathaniel Berman, Intervention in a 'divided world': axes of legitimacy
- Vasuki Nesiah, From Berlin to Bonn to Baghdad: a space for infinite justice
- Ian Johnstone, Legal deliberation and argumentation in international decision-making
- Nishkala Suntharalingam, The United Nations Security Council, regional arrangements and peace operations
- Dianne Otto, The Security Council's alliance of gender legitimacy: the symbolic capital of resolution 1325
- Lorraine Elliott, Cosmopolitan militaries and cosmopolitan force
- B. S. Chimni, Sovereignty, rights and armed intervention: a dialectical perspective
- Ralph Wilde, Setting the terms of the debate on the legitimacy of intervention: a case study of depictions of international territorial administration missions
- Jun Matsukuma, The legitimacy of economic sanctions: an analysis of humanitarian exemptions of sanctions and the right to minimum sustenance
- Hilary Charlesworth, Conclusion: the legitimacies of international law
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Charlesworth & Coicaud: Fault Lines of International Legitimacy
Hilary Charlesworth (Australian National Univ. - Law) & Jean-Marc Coicaud (United Nations Univ.) have published Fault Lines of International Legitimacy (Cambridge Univ. Press 2010). Contents include: