Showing 1 - 15 results of 15 for search '"International Law"', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Towards a Marxist Feminist approach to international law by Nanopoulos, E, Ullrich, L

    Published 2024
    “…Such a Marxist Feminist perspective, moreover, can radically change how we view women’s relationship to international law. Rather than a tool for liberation that stands outside the economic order, international law emerges as a key social terrain for the struggle against capitalist patriarchy precisely because it operates as a key site of social reproduction.…”
    Book section
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  3. 3

    The master's tools and the master's house: Marxist insights for international law by Tzanakopoulos, A

    Published 2024
    “…This is also the predicament faced by any Marxist approach to (international) law. This chapter traces the impact of Marxist thought on international law by focusing on structural aspects of international law: the structure of the (international) legal relation, aka ‘the legal form’; the content of the legal relation with particular emphasis on interpretation; and the justification of the legal relation through ideology. …”
    Book section
  4. 4

    A period of reckoning: private international law during the time of the League of Nations by Banu, R

    Published 2024
    “…It is often assumed that private international law is disconnected from geopolitical events. …”
    Book section
  5. 5

    What do we owe to each other in private international law? Moral contractualism and transnational justice by Banu, R

    Published 2024
    “…<p>While private international law has always understood the choice-of-law question as one of justice, it has constantly oscillated between focusing on state-centred or individualistic perspectives on justice. …”
    Book section
  6. 6

    Introduction by Skogly, S, Gibney, M

    Published 2011
    “…The fundamental principles governing international law are changing dramatically. International law, which traditionally has regulated the conduct between and among countries, has had as its core the respect for state sovereignty. …”
    Book section
  7. 7

    Eduard Bernstein on social democracy and international politics: essays and other writings by Ostrowski, M

    Published 2018
    “…This book presents three later works by the German social-democratic thinker and politician Eduard Bernstein, translated into English in full for the first time: Social Democracy and International Politics: Social Democracy and the European Question; League of Nations or League of States; and International Law and International Politics: The Nature, Questions, and Future of International Law. …”
    Book section
  8. 8

    Platform governance at the periphery: moderation, shutdowns and intervention by De Gregorio, G, Stremlau, N

    Published 2021
    “…It analyses Internet shutdowns to understand their socio-legal consequences, and explores the applicability of public international law and the humanitarian doctrine to information interventions.…”
    Book section
  9. 9

    Death penalty by Hoyle, CE

    Published 2022
    “…The topics range from substantive human rights to the relevant institutions, legal documents, conceptual and procedural issues of international law and a wide variety of thematic entries. …”
    Book section
  10. 10

    The Legal Capacity and Powers of International Organizations by Sarooshi, D

    Published 2016
    “…</p><p>This chapter focuses, first, on the development of international law relating to the legal personality of international organizations, including in this context a brief consideration of the issue of immunity; and then, second, turns to discuss the relationship between states and international organizations and the implications of this relationship for the responsibility of states and in some cases the responsibility of international organizations.…”
    Book section
  11. 11

    EU competence and investor migration by Sarmiento, D, van den Brink, M

    Published 2023
    “…We also explain why investment migration per se cannot be presented as unlawful and outlines the avenues for the eventual disciplining of its offshoots in areas unrelated to migration as such, thus connecting particularly well with Peter Spiro’s analysis of relevant international law.…”
    Book section
  12. 12

    North Sea continental shelf (Federal Republic of Germany v Netherlands; Federal Republic of Germany v Denmark) (1969) by Panagis, N, Tzanakopoulos, A

    Published 2017
    “…After setting out the background to the dispute and the judgment of the Court, it focuses on the Court's discussion of the sources of international law and their relationship, as well as on the definition and the rules for the delimitation of the continental shelf. …”
    Book section
  13. 13

    Non-penalization and non-criminalization by Costello, C, Ioffe, Y

    Published 2021
    “…This chapter reviews the protections under international law which purport to secure refugees’ right to seek asylum by protecting them from penalization. …”
    Book section
  14. 14

    Chinese law and development: implications for US rule of law program by Erie, MS

    Published 2023
    “…Specifically, the Party-State has endorsed what is called “foreign-related ‘rule of law’” which is a bi-directional policy initiative that seeks to both integrate more foreign law into the Chinese legal system and also incorporate more Chinese law into foreign and international law. Beyond the political bluster and political signalling, there is evidence of such initiatives affecting legal practice and institutions. …”
    Book section
  15. 15

    Chinese law and development: implications for US rule of law programs by Erie, M

    Published 2023
    “…Specifically, the Party-State has endorsed what is called “foreign-related ‘rule of law’” which is a bi-directional policy initiative that seeks to both integrate more foreign law into the Chinese legal system and also incorporate more Chinese law into foreign and international law. Beyond the political bluster and political signalling, there is evidence of such initiatives affecting legal practice and institutions. …”
    Book section