Cognitive Conflicts and the Making of International Law: From Empirical Concord to Conceptual Discor
It has long been claimed that international lawmaking has grown pluralized in the sense that it has allegedly moved away from the...
Cognitive Conflicts and the Making of International Law: From Empirical Concord to Conceptual Discor
Reverse-Rhetorical Entrapment: Naming and Shaming as a Two-Way Street
Lawyers and Precedent
Blood Diamonds and Non-State Actors
Constraining Targeting in Noninternational Armed Conflicts: Safe Conduct for Combatants Conducting I
Constraining Global Corporate Power: A Short Introduction