- Chuanju Cheng, Securing the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: The Case of Taiwan and Hunting
- Kimberly Theidon, Guerrilla Governance: Troubling Gender in the FARC
- Douglas Pretsell & Timothy Willem Jones, How Human Rights Became Gay Rights: A History of Toonen v Australia
- Jenna Norosky & Charli Carpenter, The Right to Flee the Dangers of War: Rethinking Ukraine’s Gender-Based Restriction on Civilian Men’s Freedom of Movement
- Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky & Juan Cruz Goñi, Limits to Negotiated Accountability of Economic Accomplices: The Case of Volkswagen do Brasil
- Jeremy Julian Sarkin & Tatiana Morais, The Agency of Refugees and Asylum-Seeking Women in the Face of the Inability of States to Provide Protection Against Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
Saturday, July 27, 2024
New Issue: Human Rights Quarterly
Friday, July 26, 2024
SFDI: La participation aux organisations internationales
Thursday, July 25, 2024
New Issue: Review of International Organizations
- Special Issue: The Power of the Weak
- Duncan Snidal, Thomas Hale, Emily Jones, Claas Mertens & Karolina Milewicz, The power of the “weak” and international organizations
- Lauren L. Ferry & Alexandra O. Zeitz, The power of having powerful friends: Evidence from a new dataset of IMF negotiating missions, 1985-2020
- Katherine M. Beall, Empowering to constrain: Procedural checks in international organizations
- Susanna P. Campbell & Aila M. Matanock, Weapons of the weak state: How post-conflict states shape international statebuilding
- Julia C. Morse & Bridget Coggins, Your silence speaks volumes: Weak states and strategic absence in the UN General Assembly
- Andrew Lugg, Re-contracting intergovernmental organizations: Membership change and the creation of linked intergovernmental organizations
- Michael W. Manulak, The sources of influence in multilateral diplomacy: Replaceability and intergovernmental networks in international organizations
- Rafael Mesquita, The only living guerrillero in New York: Cuba and the brokerage power of a resilient revisionist state
Arimatsu & Chinkin: Gendered Peace through International Law
Two leading feminist lawyers reflect on gender in international law to set out what a gendered peace might look like and its impact on international law in this open access book.
In order to challenge orthodoxies, the book takes an unconventional approach, merging personal reflections, expert essays, and interviews. It throws the disciplinary net wide, drawing on international law, gender studies, international relations and history. The authors, undisputed global leaders in the field, challenge the reader to unlearn international law, in order to relearn it in a way that makes it more fit for purpose in the contemporary world. This seminal work is a clarion call to think about international law in a new and transformative way.
Wednesday, July 24, 2024
Oette: The Transformation of the Prohibition of Torture in International Law
The prohibition of torture and other cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment or punishment has a special status. It is the foremost international human rights norm protecting persons from attacks on their dignity and integrity. Consequently, it has been at the forefront of a series of developments in international human rights law and international law more broadly. Having withstood sustained challenges to its absolute nature in the 'war on terror', it has broadened its scope of application, becoming more sophisticated and complex in the process. The prohibition of torture increasingly interacts with other fields of human rights law, such as non-discrimination law, international criminal law, international humanitarian law, and international migration law.
The Transformation of the Prohibition of Torture in International Law analyses the nature and significance of this transformation and looks into the scope of the prohibition's further evolution. Empirical scholarship, innovative human rights body practice, and challenges from activists, particularly from the Global South, have focused on the relational nature of torture and other ill-treatment, its embeddedness in wider structures of power, and the role of international law in legitimizing-if not facilitating-widespread suffering, from mass incarceration to poverty and climate change. This analysis reveals an inherent tension in the prohibition between a conventional, narrow focus on direct State violence and a wide lens encompassing myriad forms of suffering. To retain its validity and effectiveness in the twenty-first century, argues Lutz Oette, the prohibition on torture must navigate this tension and successfully address and transform abusive power asymmetries.
Call for Papers: ASIL International Economic Law Interest Group Biennial Conference
New Issue: Asia-Pacific Journal of Ocean Law and Policy
- Clive Schofield, Yucong Wang, & I Made Andi Arsana, Drawing the Dragon’s Claw: China Declares Territorial Sea Baselines in the Gulf of Tonkin
- Long Thang Tran, ASEAN Legal Framework for Cooperation against Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (IUU): Significance, Challenges and Proposed Solutions
- Hao Shen, Towards an Integrated Legal Regime for Data and Sample Regulation under China’s Deep Seabed Mining Law
- Yu Luan, Cabotage Law Coordinately Applied Based on ‘One Country, Two Systems’ in Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao GBA
- Clive Schofield & Frances AnggadiThe Australia-Tuvalu Falepili Union Treaty: Opportunities and Controversies
Tuesday, July 23, 2024
Call for Papers: Balancing Contradicting Human Rights Obligations in Armed Conflicts and Counter Terrorism
New Issue: Transnational Legal Theory
- Sebastian Meyer, Toleration in the European Union: a forgotten virtue
- Richard Clements, Professional field-work: constructing global health law as an ‘emerging field’
- Luiza Leite de Queiroz, A link without a right, or ubi nexus, ibi jus (?): international human rights instruments & international tax policy
- Clemens M Rieder, The construction of social Europe through transnational equality
- Franco Peirone, All in good time: temporal forms of public law decisions
- Joseph Parampathu, From securities to currencies: the regulatory consequences of adopting cryptocurrencies as legal tender