Contingency in International Law

Contingency in International Law

On the Possibility of Different Legal Histories

Heller, Kevin Jon; Venzke, Ingo

Oxford University Press

04/2021

568

Dura

Inglês

9780192898036

15 a 20 dias

1144

Descrição não disponível.
I. INTRODUCTION
1: Ingo Venzke: Contingency Situated
II. THEORISING AND NARRATING CONTIGENCY
A. Enacted Structures and Structured Actors
2: Fleur Johns: On Dead Circuits and Non-Events
3: Genevieve Painter: Contingency in International Legal History: Why Now?
4: Umut OEzsu: The Necessity of Contingency: Method and Marxism in International Law
5: Justin Desautels-Stein: The Realist and the Visionary: Property, Sovereignty, and the Problem of Social Change
6: Janne Nijman: An Enlarged Sense of Possibility for International Law: Seeking Change by Doing History
B. Situated Perspectives and Possibilities
7: Filipe dos Reis: Contingencies in International Legal Histories: Origins and Observers
8: Michele Tedeschini: Historical Base and Legal Superstructure: Reading Contingency and Necessity in the Tadic Challenge
9: Mohsen al Attar: Subverting Eurocentric Epistemology: The Value of Nonsense When Designing Counterfactuals
10: Geoff Gordon: The Time of Contingency in International Law
III. LOCATING AND RESISTING CONTINGENCY
A. Migrants and Refugees
11: Frederic Megret: The Contingency of International Migration Law
12: Christopher Szabla: Contingent Movements? Differential Decolonisations of International Refugee and Migration Law and Governance
B. Sea and Resources
13: Alex Oude Elferink: What if the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea had Entered into Force Unamended: Business as Usual or Dystopia?
14: Surabhi Ranganathan: What if Arvid Pardo had not made his famous speech? (False) Contingency in the Making of the Law of the Sea
15: Lucas Lixinski and Mats Ingulstad: Contingent Economic Ordering: Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources and International Commodity Agreements
C. Human Rights
16: Kathryn McNeilly: Rights for Daydreaming: International Human Rights Law Thought Otherwise
17: Silvia Steininger and Jochen von Bernstorff: Who Turned Multinational Corporations into Bearers of Human Rights? On the Creation of Corporate 'Human' Rights in International Law
18: Matthias Goldmann: Austerity: Why Human Rights Came Late and Helped Little
D. Armed Conflict
19: Emma Stone Mackinnon: Contingencies of Context: Contested Legacies of the Algerian Revolution in the 1977 Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions
20: Bianca Maganza: Unveiling Common Article 3 to the Geneva Conventions: Contingency, Necessity and Possibility in International Humanitarian Law
21: Amanda Alexander: The Narrative Contingency of International Humanitarian Law: Crimes against Humanity in Cixin Liu's Post-Humanist Universe
22: Nicholas Mulder and Boyd van Dijk: Why Did Starvation Not Become the Paradigmatic War Crime in International Law?
E. Foreign Investments
23: Kathryn Greenman: The Law of State Responsibility and the Persistence of Investment Protection
24: Saida El Boudouhi: Barcelona Traction Re-Imagined: The ICJ as a World Court for Foreign Investment Cases?
25: Josef Ostransky: From a Fortuitous Transplant to a Fundamental Principle of Law? The Doctrine of Legitimate Expectations and the Possibilities of a Different Law
F. The New International Economic Order
26: Kevin Crow: Bandung's Fate
27: Michelle Staggs Kelsall: 'Poisonous Flowers on the Dust-heap of a Dying Capitalism': The United Nations Code of Conduct on Transnational Corporations, Contingency and Failure in International Law
G. Eruptions
28: Edward Kolla: Contravention and Creation of Law during the French Revolution
29: Ana Delic: Contingencies in The Rise of European and Latin American Private International Law, 1850 to 1950
IV. OUTLOOK
30: Samuel Moyn: From Situated Freedom to Plausible Worlds
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