1. | Kofod Olsen, Birgitte : Menneskeretlige tendenser og udfordringer, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Menneskeretlige tendenser og udfordringer : om anti-terrorisme, pluralisme og virksomheders menneskeretlige ansvar / Kofod Olsen, Birgitte REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): EU-ret & menneskeret : årg. 11; no. 2-3., p. 76-87. - Copenhagen : Jurist- og Okonomforbudets forlag, 2004. - ISSN 1395-220X LANGUAGE: DAN INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ICCPR LIBRARY LOCATION: EU-rätt |
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2. | De Soysa, Indra : Paradise is a bazaar? greed, creed, and governance in civil war, 1989-99, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Paradise is a bazaar? greed, creed, and governance in civil war, 1989-99 / De Soysa, Indra REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of peace research : vol. 39; no. 4., p. 395-416. - London : SAGE, 2002. - ISSN 0022-3433 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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3. | van Sliedregt, Elies (ed.) : Pluralism in international criminal law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Pluralism in international criminal law / van Sliedregt, Elies (ed.) ; Vasiliev, Sergey (ed.), xxxix, 435 p.. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-870319-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Elies van Sliedregt and Sergey Vasiliev: Pluralism: A new framework for international criminal justice. 2. Cassandra Steer: Legal transplants or legal patchworking? The creation of international criminal law as a pluralistic body of law. 3. Mark A. Drumbl: The curious criminality of mass atrocity: Diverse actors, multiple truths, and plural responses. 4. Jens David Ohlin: Organizational criminality. 5. Marjolein Cupido: Pluralism in theories of liability: Joint criminal enterprise versus joint prepetration. 6. John D. Jackson and Yassin M. Brunger: Fragmentation and harmonization in the development of evidentiary practices in international criminal tribunals. 7. Barbora Holá: Consistency and pluralism of international sentencing: An empiricial assessment of the ICTY and ICTR practice. 8. Ruth A. Kok: National adjudication of international crimes: A Dutch approach. 9. Alexander Zahar: Pluralism and the rights of the accused in international criminal proceedings. 10. Elinor Fry: The nature of international crimes and evidentiary challenges: Preserving quality while managing quantity. 11. Wayne Jordash QC and Matthew R. Crowe: Evidentiary challenges for the defence: Domestic and international prosecutions of international crimes. 12. Gerhard Werle and Boris Burghardt: Establishing degrees of responsibility: Modes of participation in Article 25 of the ICC Statute. 13. James G. Stewart: Ten reasons for adopting a universal concept of participation in atrocity. 14. Javid Gadirov: Collective intentions and individual criminal responsibility in international criminal law. 15. H.H. Judge Peter Murphy and Lina Baddour: Evidence and selection of judges in international criminal tribunals: The need for a harmonized approach. INDEX WORDS:
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4. | Lang, Anthony F., Jr. (ed.) : Handbook on global constitutionalism, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Handbook on global constitutionalism / Lang, Anthony F., Jr. (ed.) ; Wiener, Antje (ed.), 457 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017. ISBN 978-1-78347-725-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Anthony F. Lang, Jr. and Antje Wiener: A constitutionalising global order: an introduction. 2. Jill Harries: Global constitutionalism: the ancient worlds. 3. Francis Oakley: Medieval constitutionalism. 4. Martine Julia van Ittersum: Global constitutionalism in the early modern period: the role of empires, treaties and natural law. 5. Chris Thornhill: The Enlightenment and global constitutionalism. 6. Michel Rosenfeld: Modern historical antecedents of global constitutionalism in theoretical perspective. 7. Garrett Wallace Brown: Cosmopolitanism and global constitutionalism. 8. Iain Ferguson: Liberal theory. 9. Jan Wilkens: Constructivism. 10. Oliver Jütersonke: Realist perspectives on global constitutionalism. 11. Gavin W. Anderson: Critical theory. 12. Jean d'Aspremont: International legal constitutionalism, legal forms and the need for villains. 13. Jutta Brunnée and Stephen J. Toope: Interactional legal theory, the international rule of law and global constitutionalism. 14. Jeffrey L. Dunoff: The multifaceted relationship between funtionalism and global constitutionalism. 15. Mattias Kumm: Global constitutionalism and the rule of law. 16. Eoin Carolan: Balance of powers. 17. Peter Niesen: Constituent power in global constitutionalism. 18. Samantha Besson: Human rights as transnational constitutional law. 19. Anne Peters: Proportionality as a global constitutional principle. 20. Bardo Fassbender: Written versus unwritten: two views on the form of an international constitution. 21. Andrew Arato: Constitution making. 22. Basak Calt: International judicial review. 23. M.J. Peterson: Legislatures. 24. William E. Scheuerman: Executive and exception. 25. Thomas O. Hueglin: Federalism: from constitutionalism to constitutionalization?. 26. Michael W. Doyle: The UN Charter and global constitutionalism?. 27. Jan Klabbers: Functionalism, constitutionalism and the United Nations. 28. Jo Shaw: The European Union and global constitutionalism. 29. Andrea Birdsall and Anthony F. Lang, Jr.: The International Criminal Court and global constitutionalism. 30. Joel P. Trachtman: Global commercial constitutionalization: the World Trade Organization. 31. Christine Schwöbel-Patel: The political economy of global constitutionalism. 32. Susanna Mancini: Global religion in a post-Westphalia world. 33. Neil Walker: Constitutionalism and pluralism. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: Inst.ref. |
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5. | Bianchi, Andrea : International law theories, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law theories : an inquiry into different ways of thinking / Bianchi, Andrea, 320 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-872511-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Different ways of thinking about international law. 2. Traditional approaches. 3. Constitutionalism and global governance. 4. Marxism. 5. The New Haven school. 6. International relations and social science methodologies. 7. Critical legal study and the new stream. 8. The Helsinki school. 9. Feminism. 10. Third World approaches. 11. Legal pluralism. 12. Social idealism. 13. Law and economics. 14. Law and literature. INDEX WORDS:
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6. | Brems, Eva (ed.) : Fragmentation and integration in human rights law, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Fragmentation and integration in human rights law : users' perspectives / Brems, Eva (ed.) ; Ouald-Chaib, Saïla (ed.), xiii, 208 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78811-391-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Ellen Desmet: Methodologies to study human rights law as an integrated whole from a users' perspective: lessons learnt. 2. Mathias Holvoet and Paul De Hert: Understanding international criminal law from a users' perspective: pluralism due to contestation, integration through collaboration. 3. Derek Inman, Stefaan Smis and Edson 'Krenak' Dorneles de Andrade: Fragmentation, harmonization and the users' perspective: the Munduruku peoples' view on land and the developing standards on indigenous peoples' land rights. 4. Barbara Oomen: Fragmentation/integration of human rights law - a users' perspective on the CRPD. 5. Emmanuelle Bribosia and Isabelle Rorive: Human rights integration in action: making equality law work for trans people in Belgium. 6. Sébastien Van Drooghenbroeck and Olivier Van der Noot: Between assimilation and exclusion: is there room for an 'integrated' approach towards constitutional and international protection of human rights?. 7. Eva Brems: Smart human rights integration. INDEX WORDS:
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7. | Husa, Jaakko : Advanced introduction to law and globalisation, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Advanced introduction to law and globalisation / Husa, Jaakko - (Elgar Advanced Introductions), viii, 173 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78897-415-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Defining law and globalisation. 2. Globalisations in time. 3. Comparative law and global law. 4. Globalising legalities. 5. Theorising globally. 6. Methodological views. 7. Educating lawyers. 8. Language of law and legal globalisation. 9. Conclusion INDEX WORDS:
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