- Curtis A. Bradley, Introduction: custom's future
- Emily Kadens, Custom's past
- Curtis A. Bradley, Customary international law adjudication as common law adjudication
- Brian D. Lepard, Customary international law as a dynamic process
- John Tasioulas, Custom, jus cogens, and human rights
- Stephen J. Choi & Mitu Gulati, Customary international law: how do courts do it?
- Monica Hakimi, Custom's method and process: lessons from humanitarian law
- Joel P. Trachtman, The growing obsolescence of customary international law
- C. L. Lim, The strange vitality of custom in the international protection of contracts, property, and commerce
- Larissa van den Herik, The decline of customary international law as a source of international criminal law
- Niels Petersen, Customary international law and public goods
- Andrew T. Guzman & Jerome Hsiang, Reinvigorating customary international law
- Laurence R. Helfer & Timothy Meyer, The evolution of codification: a principal-agent theory of the international law commission's influence
- Jan Wouters & Linda Hamid, Custom and informal international lawmaking
- Omri Sender & Michael Wood, Custom's bright future: the continuing importance of customary international law
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Bradley: Custom's Future: International Law in a Changing World
Curtis A. Bradley (Duke Univ. - Law) has published Custom's Future: International Law in a Changing World (Cambridge Univ. Press 2016). Contents include: