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International Law as a Profession
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 471

International Law as a Profession

  • Categories: Law

This collection of self-reflective essays explores the relations between international legal professions and their respective understandings of international law.

Repetition and International Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 205

Repetition and International Law

  • Categories: Law

Acts of repetition abound in international law. Security Council Resolutions typically start by recalling, recollecting, recognising or reaffirming previous resolutions. Expert committees present restatements of international law. Students and staff extensively rehearse fictitious cases in presentations for moot court competitions. Customary law exists by virtue of repeated behaviour and restatements about the existence of rules. When sources of international law are deployed, historically contingent events are turned into manifestations of pre-given and repeatable categories. This book studies the workings of repetition across six discourses and practices in international law. It links acts of repetition to similar practices in religion, theatre, film and commerce. Building on the dialectics of repetition as set out by Søren Kierkegaard, it examines how repetition in international law is used to connect concrete practices to something that is bound to remain absent, unspeakable or unimaginable.

The Law of International Lawyers
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 443

The Law of International Lawyers

This book provides original perspectives on the work of one of the most important thinkers in international law today.

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2012
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2012

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2013-06-30
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Governance and International Legal Theory
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 394

Governance and International Legal Theory

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2014-11-14
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  • Publisher: Springer

This book discusses the above-mentioned topics from a multidisciplinary perspective.

Humanity across International Law and Biolaw
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 329

Humanity across International Law and Biolaw

The concepts of humanity, human dignity and mankind have emerged in different contexts across international law and biolaw. This raises many different questions. What are the aims for which 'humanity' is mobilised? How do these aims affect the ensuing interpretations of this concept? What are the negative counterparts of humanity, mankind and human dignity? And what happens if a concept developed in one particular context is taken up in another? By bringing together research from international law, biolaw and legal theory, this volume answers such questions by analysing how the concepts overlap and contradict each other across the disciplines. The result is not an examination of what humanity is but rather what it does and what it brings about in a variety of contexts.

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2016
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 424

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2016

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-12-13
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  • Publisher: Springer

International law holds a paradoxical position with territory. Most rules of international law are traditionally based on the notion of State territory, and territoriality still significantly shapes our contemporary legal system. At the same time, new developments have challenged territory as the main organising principle in international relations. Three trends in particular have affected the role of territoriality in international law: the move towards functional regimes, the rise of cosmopolitan projects claiming to transgress state boundaries, and the development of technologies resulting in the need to address intangible, non-territorial, phenomena. Yet, notwithstanding some profound changes, it remains impossible to think of international law without a territorial locus. If international law is undergoing changes, this implies a reconfiguration of territory, but not a move beyond it. The Netherlands Yearbook of International Law was first published in 1970. It offers a forum for the publication of scholarly articles of a conceptual nature in a varying thematic area of public international law.

Risk and the Regulation of Uncertainty in International Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 326

Risk and the Regulation of Uncertainty in International Law

  • Categories: Law

Increasingly, international legal arrangements imagine future worlds or create space for experts to articulate how the future can be conceptualized and managed. With the increased specialization of international law, a series of functional regimes and sub-regimes has emerged, each with their own imageries, vocabularies, expert-knowledge, and rules to translate our hopes and fears for the future into action in the present. At issue in the development of these regimes are not just competing predictions of the future based on what we know about what has happened in the past and what we know is happening in the present. Rather, these regimes seek to deal with futures about which we know very lit...

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2019
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 399

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2019

  • Categories: Law

This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law (NYIL) is the fiftieth in the Series, which means that the NYIL has now been with us for half a century. The editors decided not to let this moment go by unnoticed, but to devote this year’s edition to an analysis of the phenomenon of yearbooks in international law. Once the decision was made that this would be the subject of this year’s NYIL, the editors asked themselves a number of questions. For instance: Not many academic disciplines have yearbooks, so what is the reason we do? What is the added value of having a yearbook alongside the abundance of international law journals, regular monographs and edited volumes that are p...

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2018
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2018

  • Categories: Law

This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law explores the many faces of populism, and the different manifestations of the relationship between populism and international law. Rather than taking the so-called populist backlash against globalisation, international law and governance at face value, this volume aims to dig deeper and wonders ‘What backlash are we talking about, really?’. While populism is contextual and contingent on the society in which it arises and its relationship with international law and institutions thus has differed likewise, this volume assists in our examination of what we find so dangerous about populism and problematic in its relationship with international law. The Netherlands Yearbook of International Law was first published in 1970. It offers a forum for the publication of scholarly articles in a varying thematic area of public international law./div