Thursday, March 16, 2017

Abbenhuis, Barber, & Higgins: War, Peace and International Order? The Legacies of the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907

Maartje Abbenhuis (Univ. of Auckland - History), Christopher Ernest Barber, & Annalise R. Higgins have published War, Peace and International Order? The Legacies of the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907 (Routledge 2017). Contents include:
  • William Mulligan, Justifying International Action: International Law, The Hague and Diplomacy Before 1914
  • Randall Lesaffer, Peace Through Law: The Hague Peace Conferences and the Rise of the Ius Contra Bellum
  • Neville Wylie, Muddied Waters: The Influence of the First Hague Conference on the Evolution of the Geneva Conventions of 1864 and 1906
  • Andrew Webster, Reconsidering Disarmament at the Hague Peace Conference of 1899, and After
  • M. Girard Dorsey, More than Just a Taboo: The Legacy of the Chemical Warfare Prohibitions of the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conferences
  • Sarah Gendron, Sub Silentio: The Sexual Assault of Women in International Law
  • Robert A. Nye, The Duel of Honour and the Origins of the Rules for Arms, Warfare and Arbitration in the Hague Conferences
  • Annalise R. Higgins, Writing for Peace: Reconsidering the British Public Peace Petitioning Movement’s Historical Legacies After 1898
  • Thomas Munro, The Hague as a Framework for British and American Newspapers’ Public Presentations of the First World War
  • Marta Stachurska-Kounta, Norway’s Legalistic Approach to Peace in the Aftermath of the First World War
  • Wolfgang Mueller, Against the Hague Conventions: Promoting New Rules for Neutrality in the Cold War
  • Yolanda Gamarra, The Neutrals and Spanish Neutrality: A Legal Approach to International Peace in Constitutional Texts