- Special Issue: Private Citizen of the World: Karen Knop’s Scholarship
- Mayo Moran, Private citizen of the faculty: Some reflections on a colleague, scholar, teacher, and friend
- Karen Knop & Annelise Riles, My own pink world: Feminist diplomacy after culture
- Roxana Banu, Private international law’s ambivalent humanism
- Karen Engle, ‘Private’ diplomacy and nuclear disarmament: Revisiting the Cold War activism of Women for a Meaningful Summit
- Fleur Johns, Rehoming diplomacy: Privilege and possibility in the international law of diplomatic relations
- David Kennedy, Possibility in paradox: Karen Knop re/stated
- Martti Koskenniemi, The law of international society: A road not taken
- Ralf Michaels, The right to have private rights
- Mai Taha, History and contestation: On teaching Diversity and Self-Determination in International Law
- Philippe Sands, On lizard pumps and the self-determination of Karen Knop
- Robert Wai, Trade law as foreign relations law
- David Dyzenhaus, Private citizen of the world: Karen Knop’s scholarship
Friday, July 5, 2024
Special Issue: Private Citizen of the World: Karen Knop’s Scholarship
The latest issue of the University of Toronto Law Journal (Vol. 74, Supp. No. 1, 2024) is a special issue on "Private Citizen of the World: Karen Knop’s Scholarship." Contents include: