Revolutions in International Law
Herausgeber: Greenman, Kathryn; Saunders, Anna; Orford, Anne
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1. International law and revolution: 1917 and beyond Kathryn Greenman, Anne
Orford, Ntina Tzouvala and Anna Saunders; Part I. Imperialism: 2. Looking
eastwards: the Bolshevik theory of imperialism and international law Ntina
Tzouvala and Robert Knox; 3. Lenin at Nuremberg: anti-imperialism and the
juridification of crimes against humanity Amanda Alexander; Part II.
Institutions and Orders: 4. Excluding revolutionary states: Mexico, Russia
and the League of Nations Alison Duxbury; 5. Law, class struggle and
nervous breakdowns Mai Taha; 6. Microcosm: Soviet constitutional
internationality Scott Newton; 7. Law and socialist revolution: early
Soviet legal theory and practice Owen Taylor; Part III. Intervention: 8.
Intervention: sketches from the scenes of the Mexican and Russian
Revolutions Dino Kritsiotis; 9. Mexican revolutionary constituencies and
the Latin American critique of US intervention Juan Pablo Scarfi; 10.
Mexican post-revolutionary foreign policy and the Spanish Civil War: legal
struggles over intervention at the League of Nations Fabia Fernandes
Carvalho Veçoso; Part IV. Investment: 11. 1917: property, revolution and
rejection in international law Kate Miles; 12. 1917 and its implications
for the law of expropriation Daria Davitti; 13. Contestations over legal
authority: the Lena Goldfields Arbitration 1930 Andrea Leiter; 14. The
Mexican Revolution: alien protection and international economic order
Kathryn Greenman; Part V. Rights: 15. 'Animated by the European spirit':
European human rights as counterrevolutionary legality Anna Saunders; 16.
Human Rights, revolution and the 'good society': the Soviet Union and the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights Jessica Whyte.