- Chios Carmody, Introduction: Is Our House in Order? Canada’s Implementation of International Law
- Michael Byers, Canada’s Implementation of International Law: Why It Matters
- Armand de Mestral, The Relationship of International and Domestic Law as Understood in Canada
- Stéphane Paquin, Federalism and Multi-Level Governance in Foreign Affairs:A Comparison of Canada and Belgium
- Jaye Ellis, On the Nature and Meaning of International Legal Obligation: Canada’s Responses to Kyoto
- Lucie Lamarche, Economic and Social Rights in an Era of Governance and Governance Arrangements in Canada: The Need to Re-visit the Issue of the Implementation of International Human Rights Law
- Chios Carmody, Canada’s Implementation of the WTO Agreement
- Anthony R. Daimsis, Canada’s Indoor Arbitration Management: Making Good on Promises to the Outside World
- Robert J. Currie, Libman at Twenty-five; or, Canada and Qualified Territoriality: Do We Understand Jurisdiction Yet?
- Christopher K. Penny, Domestic Reception and Application of International Humanitarian Law: Coming Challenges forCanadian Courts in the “Campaign against Terror”
- Dwight G. Newman, Letting the Elephants Watch the Mice: The Surrender of Canadian Anti-Bribery Legislation to American Jurisdiction
- Margaret Ann Wilkinson, Confidential Information and Privacy-Related Law in Canada and in International Instruments
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Carmody: Is Our House in Order? Canada's Implementation of International Law
Chios Carmody (Univ. of Western Ontario - Law) has posted Is Our House in Order? Canada's Implementation of International Law (McGill-Queen's Univ. Press 2010). Contents include: