Tracing Value Change in the International Legal Order
Perspectives from Legal and Political Science
Herausgeber: Krieger, Heike; Liese, Andrea
Tracing Value Change in the International Legal Order
Perspectives from Legal and Political Science
Herausgeber: Krieger, Heike; Liese, Andrea
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The international legal order is undergoing a crisis of unusual proportions. This book brings together multiple interdisciplinary contributors to explore whether the values underpinning international law itself are changing, the processes and mechanisms through which changes might be taking place, and how these changes can be negotiated.
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The international legal order is undergoing a crisis of unusual proportions. This book brings together multiple interdisciplinary contributors to explore whether the values underpinning international law itself are changing, the processes and mechanisms through which changes might be taking place, and how these changes can be negotiated.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 160mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 686g
- ISBN-13: 9780192855831
- ISBN-10: 0192855832
- Artikelnr.: 67865574
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 160mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 686g
- ISBN-13: 9780192855831
- ISBN-10: 0192855832
- Artikelnr.: 67865574
Heike Krieger is the Chair for International and Public Law at the Freie Universität Berlin. She is Chair of the Berlin Potsdam Research Group (KFG) 'The International Rule of Law - Rise or Decline?', Vice Chair of the German Society for International Law, and member of the Senate of the German Research Foundation. Between 2007 and 2014 she acted as a judge of the Constitutional Court of the State of Berlin. Her research focuses on general international law, international human rights law, and international humanitarian law. She is Editor-in-Chief of the Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law. Andrea Liese is Professor of International Relations at the University of Potsdam and a member of the Berlin Potsdam Research Group (KFG) 'The International Rule of Law - Rise or Decline?' She held research and teaching positions at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, at Freie Universität Berlin, and at the University of Bremen. She was also a Visiting Fellow at the Berlin Social Science Center (WZB) and a John F Kennedy Memorial Fellow at Harvard University. Her research focuses on the authority, expertise, and neutrality of international organizations and on norm collisions in international politics.
* 1: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Introduction: Value Change in the
International Legal Order
* Part I: Conceptualizing Change and Resilience of (Legal) Norms
* 2: Antje Wiener: Norm(ative) Change in International Relations: A
Conceptual Framework
* 3: Wayne Sandholtz: Is Winter Coming? - Norm Challenges and Norm
Resilience
* 4: Thomas Kleinlein: Matters of Interpretation - How to Conceptualize
and Evaluate Change of Norms and Values in the International Legal
Order
* Part II: Peremptory Norms Shielding Values from Change?
* 5: Erika de Wet: Entrenching International Values through Positive
Law: The (Limited) Effect of Peremptory Norms
* 6: Max Lesch and Lisbeth Zimmermann: There's Life in the Old Dog Yet:
Assessing the Strength of the International Torture Prohibition
* 7: Dominik Steiger: Ex iniuria ius oritur? - Norm Change and Norm
Erosion of the Prohibition of Torture
* 8: Theresa Reinold: The Prohibition on the Use of Force: Plus Ça
Change? - Towards a Theory of Global Normative Change
* 9: Srinivas Burra: Changing Perceptions on the Right of Self-Defence
- Reflections from a Third World Perspective
* Part III: Reversing Post-cold War Trends of Norm Development?
* 10: Adam Bower: The International Criminal Court: Between Sovereignty
and the Internationalized Fight against Impunity
* 11: Malcolm Jorgensen: Ideological Values and Norm Contestation in
the ICC: The Afghanistan Investigation and American Opposition to
Article 12(2)(a) Jurisdiction
* 12: Alexandros Tokhi: Authoritarian Regimes and Nuclear
Nonproliferation Norms
* 13: Mirko Sossai: Arms Control: Between the NPT and the Nuclear
Taboo?
* 14: Conny Roggeband: International Women's Rights: Progress Under
Attack?
* 15: Lea Barbara Kuhlmann: The Status of International Women's Rights
- Are Women's Rights in Danger?
* 16: Sandra Schwindenhammer: The Future We Want? - Interlinking Global
Sustainability Norm Change, Technology Innovation, and Regime
Complexity
* 17: Peter-Tobias Stoll: Precaution and Genetically Modified
Organisms: A Healthy Legal Environment?
* Part IV: Conclusion
* 18: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Turbulence, Robustness, and Value
Change
International Legal Order
* Part I: Conceptualizing Change and Resilience of (Legal) Norms
* 2: Antje Wiener: Norm(ative) Change in International Relations: A
Conceptual Framework
* 3: Wayne Sandholtz: Is Winter Coming? - Norm Challenges and Norm
Resilience
* 4: Thomas Kleinlein: Matters of Interpretation - How to Conceptualize
and Evaluate Change of Norms and Values in the International Legal
Order
* Part II: Peremptory Norms Shielding Values from Change?
* 5: Erika de Wet: Entrenching International Values through Positive
Law: The (Limited) Effect of Peremptory Norms
* 6: Max Lesch and Lisbeth Zimmermann: There's Life in the Old Dog Yet:
Assessing the Strength of the International Torture Prohibition
* 7: Dominik Steiger: Ex iniuria ius oritur? - Norm Change and Norm
Erosion of the Prohibition of Torture
* 8: Theresa Reinold: The Prohibition on the Use of Force: Plus Ça
Change? - Towards a Theory of Global Normative Change
* 9: Srinivas Burra: Changing Perceptions on the Right of Self-Defence
- Reflections from a Third World Perspective
* Part III: Reversing Post-cold War Trends of Norm Development?
* 10: Adam Bower: The International Criminal Court: Between Sovereignty
and the Internationalized Fight against Impunity
* 11: Malcolm Jorgensen: Ideological Values and Norm Contestation in
the ICC: The Afghanistan Investigation and American Opposition to
Article 12(2)(a) Jurisdiction
* 12: Alexandros Tokhi: Authoritarian Regimes and Nuclear
Nonproliferation Norms
* 13: Mirko Sossai: Arms Control: Between the NPT and the Nuclear
Taboo?
* 14: Conny Roggeband: International Women's Rights: Progress Under
Attack?
* 15: Lea Barbara Kuhlmann: The Status of International Women's Rights
- Are Women's Rights in Danger?
* 16: Sandra Schwindenhammer: The Future We Want? - Interlinking Global
Sustainability Norm Change, Technology Innovation, and Regime
Complexity
* 17: Peter-Tobias Stoll: Precaution and Genetically Modified
Organisms: A Healthy Legal Environment?
* Part IV: Conclusion
* 18: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Turbulence, Robustness, and Value
Change
* 1: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Introduction: Value Change in the
International Legal Order
* Part I: Conceptualizing Change and Resilience of (Legal) Norms
* 2: Antje Wiener: Norm(ative) Change in International Relations: A
Conceptual Framework
* 3: Wayne Sandholtz: Is Winter Coming? - Norm Challenges and Norm
Resilience
* 4: Thomas Kleinlein: Matters of Interpretation - How to Conceptualize
and Evaluate Change of Norms and Values in the International Legal
Order
* Part II: Peremptory Norms Shielding Values from Change?
* 5: Erika de Wet: Entrenching International Values through Positive
Law: The (Limited) Effect of Peremptory Norms
* 6: Max Lesch and Lisbeth Zimmermann: There's Life in the Old Dog Yet:
Assessing the Strength of the International Torture Prohibition
* 7: Dominik Steiger: Ex iniuria ius oritur? - Norm Change and Norm
Erosion of the Prohibition of Torture
* 8: Theresa Reinold: The Prohibition on the Use of Force: Plus Ça
Change? - Towards a Theory of Global Normative Change
* 9: Srinivas Burra: Changing Perceptions on the Right of Self-Defence
- Reflections from a Third World Perspective
* Part III: Reversing Post-cold War Trends of Norm Development?
* 10: Adam Bower: The International Criminal Court: Between Sovereignty
and the Internationalized Fight against Impunity
* 11: Malcolm Jorgensen: Ideological Values and Norm Contestation in
the ICC: The Afghanistan Investigation and American Opposition to
Article 12(2)(a) Jurisdiction
* 12: Alexandros Tokhi: Authoritarian Regimes and Nuclear
Nonproliferation Norms
* 13: Mirko Sossai: Arms Control: Between the NPT and the Nuclear
Taboo?
* 14: Conny Roggeband: International Women's Rights: Progress Under
Attack?
* 15: Lea Barbara Kuhlmann: The Status of International Women's Rights
- Are Women's Rights in Danger?
* 16: Sandra Schwindenhammer: The Future We Want? - Interlinking Global
Sustainability Norm Change, Technology Innovation, and Regime
Complexity
* 17: Peter-Tobias Stoll: Precaution and Genetically Modified
Organisms: A Healthy Legal Environment?
* Part IV: Conclusion
* 18: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Turbulence, Robustness, and Value
Change
International Legal Order
* Part I: Conceptualizing Change and Resilience of (Legal) Norms
* 2: Antje Wiener: Norm(ative) Change in International Relations: A
Conceptual Framework
* 3: Wayne Sandholtz: Is Winter Coming? - Norm Challenges and Norm
Resilience
* 4: Thomas Kleinlein: Matters of Interpretation - How to Conceptualize
and Evaluate Change of Norms and Values in the International Legal
Order
* Part II: Peremptory Norms Shielding Values from Change?
* 5: Erika de Wet: Entrenching International Values through Positive
Law: The (Limited) Effect of Peremptory Norms
* 6: Max Lesch and Lisbeth Zimmermann: There's Life in the Old Dog Yet:
Assessing the Strength of the International Torture Prohibition
* 7: Dominik Steiger: Ex iniuria ius oritur? - Norm Change and Norm
Erosion of the Prohibition of Torture
* 8: Theresa Reinold: The Prohibition on the Use of Force: Plus Ça
Change? - Towards a Theory of Global Normative Change
* 9: Srinivas Burra: Changing Perceptions on the Right of Self-Defence
- Reflections from a Third World Perspective
* Part III: Reversing Post-cold War Trends of Norm Development?
* 10: Adam Bower: The International Criminal Court: Between Sovereignty
and the Internationalized Fight against Impunity
* 11: Malcolm Jorgensen: Ideological Values and Norm Contestation in
the ICC: The Afghanistan Investigation and American Opposition to
Article 12(2)(a) Jurisdiction
* 12: Alexandros Tokhi: Authoritarian Regimes and Nuclear
Nonproliferation Norms
* 13: Mirko Sossai: Arms Control: Between the NPT and the Nuclear
Taboo?
* 14: Conny Roggeband: International Women's Rights: Progress Under
Attack?
* 15: Lea Barbara Kuhlmann: The Status of International Women's Rights
- Are Women's Rights in Danger?
* 16: Sandra Schwindenhammer: The Future We Want? - Interlinking Global
Sustainability Norm Change, Technology Innovation, and Regime
Complexity
* 17: Peter-Tobias Stoll: Precaution and Genetically Modified
Organisms: A Healthy Legal Environment?
* Part IV: Conclusion
* 18: Heike Krieger and Andrea Liese: Turbulence, Robustness, and Value
Change