- Matthew Craven, Theorizing the Turn to History in International Law
- Randall Lesaffer, Roman Law and the Intellectual History of International Law
- Martti Koskenniemi, Transformations of Natural Law: Germany 1648-1815
- Martine Julia Van Ittersum, Hugo Grotius: The Making of a Founding Father of International Law
- Emmanuelle Tourme-Jouannet, The Critique of Classical Thought During the Interwar Period: Vattel and Van Vollenhoven
- Umut Özsu, The Ottoman Empire, the Origins of Extraterritoriality, and International Legal Theory
- Teemu Ruskola, China in the Age of the World Picture
- Antony Anghie, Imperialism and International Legal Theory
- Mónica García-Salmones, Early Twentieth Century Positivism Revisited
- Jochen von Bersnstorff, Hans Kelsen and the Return of Universalism
- Robert Howse, Schmitt, Schmitteanism and contemporary International Legal Theory
- Deborah Whitehall, Hannah Arendt and International Legal Theory
- Lauri Mälksoo, International Legal Theory in Russia: A Civilizational Perspective, or can Individuals be Subjects of International Law?
- Geoff Gordon, Natural Law in International Legal Theory: Linear and Dialectical Presentations
- Robert Knox, Marxist Approaches to International Law
- Oliver Jütersonke, Realist Approaches to International Law
- Oliver Kessler, Constructivism and the Politics of International Law
- Peter Goodrich, The International Signs Law
- Samantha Besson, Moral Philosophy and International Law
- Jörg Kammerhofer, International Legal Positivism
- Hengameh Saberi, Yale's Policy Science and International Law: Between Legal Formalism and the Policy Conceptualism
- Dan Danielsen, International Law and Economics: Letting Go of 'The Normal' in Pursuit of an Ever-Elusive Real
- Daniel Joyce, Liberal Internationalism
- Dianne Otto, Feminist Approaches to International Law
- Wouter Werner & Geoff Gordon, Kant, Cosmopolitanism, and International Law
- Benedict Kingsbury, Megan Donaldson & Rodrigo Vallejo, Global Administrative Law and Deliberative Democracy
- Jean d'Aspremont, Towards a New Theory of Sources in International Law
- Gerry Simpson, Something to do With States
- Rose Parfitt, Theorizing Recognition and International Personality
- Gregor Noll, Theorizing Jurisdiction
- Jan Klabbers, Theorizing International Organizations
- Fleur Johns, Theorizing the Corporation in International Law
- Dino Kritsiotis, Theorizing International Law on force and intervention
- Ben Golder, Theorizing Human Rights
- Anne Orford, Theorizing Free Trade
- Sarah Nouwen, International Criminal Law: Theory All Over the Place
- Frédéric Mégret, Theorizing the Laws of War
- Vasuki Nesiah, Theorizing Transitional Justice: Cashing in the Blue Chips
- Stephen Humphreys & Yoriko Otomo, Theorizing International Environmental Law
- Kerry Rittich, Theorizing International Law and Development
- Outi Korhonen & Toni Selkälä, Theorizing Responsibility
- Horatia Muir Watt, Theorizing Private International Law
- Chantal Thomas, Transnational Migration, Globalization, and Governance: Theorizing a Crisis
- Reut Paz, Religion, Secularism, and International Law
- Thomas Skouterist, The Idea of Progress
- Florian Hoffmann, International Legalism and International Politics
- Jason Beckett, Creating Poverty
- Anne Peters, Fragmentation and Constitutionalization
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Orford & Hoffmann: The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law
Anne Orford (Univ. of Melbourne - Law) & Florian Hoffmann (Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro - Law) have published The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law (Oxford Univ. Press 2016). Contents include: