Friday, December 3, 2010

Eriksen & Emberland: The New International Law: An Anthology

Christoffer C. Eriksen & Marius Emberland have published The New International Law: An Anthology (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 2010). Contents include:
  • Ivar Alvik, Marius Emberland, &Christoffer C. Eriksen, Polycentric Decision-making Structures and Fragmented Spheres of Law: A New Generation of International Legal Discourse?
  • Stéphane Beaulac, Thinking Outside the “Westphalian Box”: Dualism, Legal Interpretation and the Contextual Argument
  • Nikolaos Lavranos, Jurisdictional Competition between International Courts and Tribunals: How to Square the Circle?
  • Antoine Buyse, Piercing the Tattered Veil: Housing Restitution in Bosnia as a Case Study of Researching Human Rights with the Help of International Relations Theory
  • Ole Jacob Sending, The Power of Administration: Law and Politics in Global Governance
  • Ivar Alvik, The Hybrid Nature of Investment Treaty Arbitration – Straddling the National/International Divide
  • Ingunn Ikdahl, Competing Notions of Property Rights: Land Rights Reform at the Intersection of the International and the Local
  • Natasha Balendra, International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law: Alternative Frameworks for Interaction
  • Kristin Bergtora Sandvik, Rapprochement and Misrecognition: Humanitarianism as Human Rights Practice
  • Moria Paz, A Non-territorial Ethnic Network and the Making of Human Rights Law: The Case of the Alliance Israélite Universelle
  • Jo Stigen, What’s in the ICC for States?
  • Aristotle Constantinides, ‘Securitizing’ Development: Advantages and Pitfalls of the Security Council’s Involvement in Development Issues
  • Cecilia M. Bailliet, Constitutional Underpinnings for Conscientious Objection in Allegiance to International Public Law Norms pertaining to War
  • Christina Voigt, Sustainable Development in Practice: The Flexibility Mechanisms of the Kyoto Protocol
  • Nicolai Nyland, What may be the New International Environmental Law?