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In the freshest international law text in 20 years, Christopher C. Joyner offers a critical assessment of international legal rules in the early 21st century as they are applied by governments to the real world.
In exploring American reluctance to join the International Criminal Court, this text illuminates a central dilemma facing US foreign policy; whether the U.S. can afford to remain estranged from international institutions that support norms and behaviours it has long championed.
A guide on how to use international law, constitutional law, and the laws of war to defend peaceful non-violent protestors against governmental policies that are... Læs mere
Introduces nonregimes into the study of global governance, and compares successes with failures in the... Læs mere
Attempts to situate the political dimension of the International Criminal Court in theory and practice. Providing... Læs mere
A ready reference covering the issues and context of rights including the universality of rights, the hierarchy of rights, and conflicts between rights.
A multinational team of scholars and experts address the issue of controlling the use of privatized forces by states. They address the role of contract employees, their acceptance by military personnel, and possible tensions between them.
This book deals with the genre of Mukhta?ar in Islamic law and the significance of its emergence in the development and formation of Islamic law. This book comprehensively explores its emergence and analyzes civil and commercial law in four Islamic Sunni schools of law.
This study provides political and economic analyses of current controversies in the South China Sea. It examines enduring territorial disputes,... Læs mere
This book considers how legislatures have undermined the presumption of innocence and how courts have largely accepted it. It argues... Læs mere
This book provides a comparative legal analysis of the civil codes in force in Tunisia, Morocco, and Mauritania. The book also imparts insight into the work and life of the principal author of the Tunisian code— a Jewish man of Tunisian origin named David Santillana.