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Cynical International Law?: Abuse and Circumvention in Public International and European Law
In International Law We (Do Not) Trust: The Persistent Rejection of Economic and Social Rights as a Manifestation of Cynicism
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Author(s):
Caroline Omari Lichuma
Publication date
(Online):
November 29 2020
Publisher:
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
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Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World
Samuel Moyn
(2018)
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Human Rights Transformed
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The Least Dangerous Branch: The Supreme Court at the Bar of Politics 26
M. Bickel Alexander
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Alexander M. BICKEL
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Bickel Alexander
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(1962)
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2021
Publication date (Online):
November 29 2020
Pages
: 195-214
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-662-62128-8_12
SO-VID:
ba2ed0a5-5efd-474b-ad36-962458bac251
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Book chapters
pp. 1
How (Not) to Be Cynical in International Law
pp. 15
Cynicism and the Autonomy of International Law
pp. 37
Beyond Cynicism and Critique: International Law and the Possibility of Change
pp. 59
Cynicism as a Modus of Political Agency: Can It Speak to International Law?
pp. 81
The International Law Commission as a Club of Cynics? Originalism and Legalism in the Commission’s Contemporary Work
pp. 103
The Added Value of the International Law Commission and Its Future Role in the Progressive Development and Codification of International Law
pp. 111
From Speaking Truth to Power to Speaking Power’s Truth: Transnational Judicial Activism in an Increasingly Illiberal World
pp. 135
From Judicialisation to Politicisation? A Response to Daniel Quiroga-Villamarín by an Academic Turned Practitioner
pp. 143
Oceans of Cynicism? Norm-Genesis, Lawfare and the South China Sea Arbitration Case
pp. 163
Peace Through Law? The Role of the Law of the Sea Convention Put into Question
pp. 177
Assessing the Strategic Use of the EU Preliminary Ruling Procedure by National Courts
pp. 195
In International Law We (Do Not) Trust: The Persistent Rejection of Economic and Social Rights as a Manifestation of Cynicism
pp. 215
In International Law We Shall Trust: (Even in) The Case of Economic and Social Rights
pp. 235
All Is Fair in Law and War? Legal Cynicism in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
pp. 261
Cynicism? Yes, Please! Embracing Cynicism at the International Criminal Court
pp. 283
Abuse of Right in International Law: A Roman Law Analogy
pp. 301
Abuse of Rights: From Roman Law to International Law? Comments on the Contribution by Andrea Faraci and Luigi Lonardo
pp. 309
Cynicism and Nationality Planning in International Investment Law
pp. 327
(New) Ways of Combating Abuse and Circumvention of European Law on the Example of Tax Evasion and Tax Avoidance
pp. 347
Cynicism as an Analytical Lense for International Law? Concluding Observations
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