Friday, January 3, 2020

Bradlow & Hunter: Advocating Social Change through International Law: Exploring the Choice between Hard and Soft International Law

Daniel Bradlow (Univ. of Pretoria - Law) & David Hunter (American Univ. - Law) have published Advocating Social Change through International Law: Exploring the Choice between Hard and Soft International Law (Brill | Nijhoff 2020). Contents include:
  • Daniel D. Bradlow & David B. Hunter, Introduction: Exploring the Relationship between Hard and Soft International Law and Social Change
  • Upendra Baxi, The Softening of Hard Law and the Hardening of Soft Law: an Extended Synopsis
  • Claudio Grossman, Promoting Social Change through Treaties and Customary International Law: the Experience of the Inter-American Human Rights System
  • Ann Skelton, Children’s Rights: Social Change through the Application of Hard and Soft International Law
  • Angela Mudukuti, The International Criminal Court and the Use of Hard Law in the Quest for Accountability for Core International Crimes
  • Natalia Gomez Peña & David B. Hunter, The Hard Choices in Promoting Environmental Access Rights
  • David B. Hunter, The Hard Choice for Soft Commitments in the Climate Change Regime
  • Patricia Anne Lambert, A Turning Point in a Slow Revolution: the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
  • Daniel D. Bradlow, Soft International Law and the Promotion of Financial Regulation and Responsibility
  • Sheldon Leader & Luis Felipe Yanes, Levers for and Obstacles to Social Change: Bank Lending, the Law and the Equator Principles
  • Nikki Reisch, Non-Judicial Grievance Mechanisms: Hardening the Soft Law of Corporate Accountability?
  • Daniel D. Bradlow & David B. Hunter, Hard and Soft International Law and Their Contribution to Social Change: The Lessons Learned