Nov 8, 2013Cognitive Conflicts and the Making of International Law: From Empirical Concord to Conceptual DiscorIt has long been claimed that international lawmaking has grown pluralized in the sense that it has allegedly moved away from the...
Nov 8, 2013Reverse-Rhetorical Entrapment: Naming and Shaming as a Two-Way StreetThis Article argues that, rather than being mere targets, governments can and do engage in “reverse rhetorical entrapment,” thus shaping...
Nov 8, 2013Lawyers and PrecedentAny account of international law that does not explain the role of lawyers will necessarily be deficient. This is particularly the case...
Nov 8, 2013Blood Diamonds and Non-State ActorsThe Kimberley Process did not end the major diamond wars, but it entirely changed the way the trade in rough diamonds was managed and...
Nov 8, 2013Constraining Targeting in Noninternational Armed Conflicts: Safe Conduct for Combatants Conducting IMargulies newSome evidence suggests that informal negotiators have been either targeted or become collateral damage in U.S. drone...
Nov 8, 2013Constraining Global Corporate Power: A Short IntroductionThis Essay sets out three models of institutional constraint of global corporate power. First is private lawmaking, in which the...