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27 Aug 2014, 6:46 am
What success can the construction of a ‘global public law’ as a law of global governance have? [read post]
20 Aug 2014, 7:14 pm
(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2014) Since 2010, I have been posting on the development  of a new course I have been developing for our first year law school students, "Elements of Law. [read post]
14 Aug 2014, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
ForbathLeigh Ann Wheeler, How Sex Became A Civil Liberty, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.Laura WeinribFernanda Pirie, The Anthropology of Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.Eve Darian-Smith [read post]
11 Aug 2014, 8:33 pm
He is the author of more than twenty books dealing in whole or in part with international human rights law, including: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: travaux préparatoires (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013); Unimaginable Atrocities, Justice, Politics and Rights at the War Crimes Tribunals (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), The International Criminal Court: A Commentary on the Rome Statute (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010),… [read post]
9 Aug 2014, 8:12 pm by Michael W. Dowdle
  In 2005, Randall Peerenboom, wrote a book published by Oxford University Press, entitled China Modernizes: Threat to the West or Model for the Rest? [read post]
24 Jul 2014, 7:44 am by Karen Hoffmann
Stephanie Farrior has been elected a Visiting Fellow of the University of Oxford, Kellogg College, for the 2014-2015 academic year. [read post]
7 Jul 2014, 7:51 am
").You might remember that we were just talking about the phrase "man up," in a post titled "Is America's dominant 'man up' ethos a hypermasculine cultural construct, a tenet rooted in biological gender difference or something in between? [read post]
6 Jul 2014, 1:00 am by Emily Prifogle
” (p. 8) What I like most about the book is Wood's meticulous source work: court dockets, newspapers, tax lists, census schedules, city directories, maps, records of women’s organizations and city council records are used imaginatively and scrupulously to construct not just her argument, but also an almost palpable world for the reader to inhabit alongside the book’s actors. [read post]
25 Jun 2014, 8:25 am
This also parallels strong currents in Western theology, and the philosophical movements that have sought to construct theological structures without reference to historical divinities. [read post]
22 Jun 2014, 9:01 pm by Neil Cahn
She received her doctorate in philosophy at Oxford University, and is now a professor at Rutgers focused on choice, freedom, value and action. [read post]
17 Jun 2014, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Stevens Professor of Law at Cornell University Law School and the principal author of The Oxford Introductions to U.S. [read post]
10 Jun 2014, 10:26 am
(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2014)) Corporate social responsibility, both in its traditional forms and in its current international form as as species of human rights, has become an important issue of corporate governance both in the national and international spheres.But the discourse, and the premises underlying it, are usually based on Western models of corporate governance and the structuring of political states and public order. [read post]
3 Jun 2014, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Stevens Professor of Law at Cornell University Law School and the principal author of The Oxford Introductions to U.S. [read post]
20 May 2014, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
My book Tocqueville’s Nightmare: The Administrative State Emerges in America, 1900-1940 is officially published today by the Oxford University Press. [read post]
12 May 2014, 6:43 am
On the margins of contractual behavior, or at its outer limits, we may find it impossible to construct any story at all with respect to what the parties have agreed to -- in which case neither has any right to impose duties on the other. [read post]
12 May 2014, 5:05 am by Beth Graham
On the margins of contractual behavior, or at its outer limits, we may find it impossible to construct any story at all with respect to what the parties have agreed to — in which case neither has any right to impose duties on the other. [read post]
6 May 2014, 11:50 am by Paul Horwitz
Paul Horwitz is the Gordon Rosen Professor of Law at the University of Alabama School of Law and the author of The Agnostic Age: Law, Religion, and the Constitution (Oxford University Press, 2011). [read post]
4 May 2014, 12:30 am by Emily Prifogle
It is a mythical construct that poses a myriad of political ramifications. [read post]