Format:
1 Online-Ressource (208 Seiten)
Edition:
1st ed
ISBN:
9789004472365
Series Statement:
Nijhoff Law Specials Series v.104
Content:
This volume offers a series of short and highly self-reflective essays by leading international lawyers on how global crises inform the functioning and theorizing of international law as well as how international law addresses global crises
Note:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Crisis and Its Curators: A Preface -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 The Love of Crisis -- 1 On Change and Crisis -- 2 On International Lawyers in Crisis -- 3 On Accountability as Crisis -- 4 On Crisis Talk -- 5 On Crisis Culture -- 6 On Moral Holidays -- Chapter 2 Crisis? What Damned Crisis? -- Chapter 3 Crisis Narratives and the Tale of Our Anxieties -- Chapter 4 Crisis and International Law: A Third World Approaches to International Law Perspective -- 1 Introduction -- 2 A Typology of Crisis -- 2.1 Material Crisis -- 2.2 Epistemic Crisis -- 2.3 More on Framing a Crisis -- 3 International Law and the Post Pandemic Era -- 3.1 Deepening Crisis of Poverty -- 3.2 Accelerating Ecological Crisis -- 3.3 Growing Crisis of Multilateralism, Law and Institutions -- 3.4 Crisis, Resistance and International Law -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 covid and the Crisis Mode in International Legal Scholarship -- Chapter 6 Narratives of Solidarity in Times of Crisis: Tales from Africa -- Chapter 7 International Law as a Crisis Discourse: The Peril of Wordlessness -- 1 A Discourse for Crisis, about Crisis, and in Crisis -- 2 Crises as Discursive Necessities -- 3 The Peril of Wordlessness in the Face of the Climate Catastrophe -- Chapter 8 covid-19 as a Catalyst for the (Re-)Constitutionalisation of International Law: One Health - One Welfare -- 1 Jurisfiction: Three Lives and Deaths under covid-19 -- 2 Diagnosis: Once Again a Disease Drives the Development of International Law -- 3 Remedy: One Health as an International Constitutional Principle -- 3.1 One Health in Response to Zoonoses -- 3.2 Expansion of the One Health Approach in Three Dimensions -- 4 Conclusion
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Chapter 9 The covid-19 Pandemic Crisis and International Law: A Constitutional Moment, A Tipping Point or More of the Same? -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The covid-19 Pandemic as the Harbinger of a Constitutional Moment -- 3 International Law and Reliance on Scientific Knowledge -- 4 Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 10 Beyond War Narratives: Laying Bare the Structural Violence of the Pandemic -- 1 Smoke and Mirrors: covid-19 and the War Rhetoric -- 2 Understanding the Pandemic via Structural Violence -- 3 Root Causes: The Interconnection of Humanity, Ecology, and Economy -- 4 Of Frames, Power, and Responsibility -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 11 Repetitive Renewal: covid, Canons and Blinkers -- 1 Expanding the Canon: A Greater Role for Global Health Law -- 2 Beware of Blinkers: International Law beyond covid -- 2.1 Regional Trade Facilitation -- 2.2 Slowly Embedding the Global Compact on Migration -- 2.3 International Law's Majestic Mundanity -- 3 Déjà-vu All Over Again? -- Chapter 12 International Law and Crisis Narratives after the covid-19 Pandemic -- 1 Surveillance of the Population -- 2 Mobility - The Archetype of Globalization -- 3 Global Governance and Law of Proximity -- Chapter 13 Only Once ... Upon a Time? -- 1 The International Health Regulations: Is It Possible to Prevent Another "Unthinkable"? -- 2 Comprehensiveness: How to Reach You? -- 3 In Whose Name? -- 4 A Humbling Task -- Chapter 14 The Kaleidoscopic World Confronts a Pandemic -- 1 Characteristics of the covid-19 Pandemic -- 2 Limits of International Law for the covid-19 Pandemic -- 3 Reconceptualizing Public International Law5 -- 4 Recognizing and Maintaining Norms -- 5 Controlling covid-19 as a Public Good in a Kaleidoscopic World -- Chapter 15 How Learned Are Our Lessons? -- 1 The World Is at War against the covid-19 -- 2 Authoritarian Approaches to Deal with the Pandemic
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3 Equality as the First Victim of the Pandemic -- 4 A Global Health Problem Looking for a Universal Approach -- 5 Is the Pandemic a Turning Point for International Law? -- Chapter 16 Hobbes and the Plague Doctors -- Chapter 17 The covid-19 Crisis, Indigenous Peoples, and International Law: A Vulnerability Perspective -- 1 Fineman's Vulnerability and Its Implications -- 2 Facilitating Opportunities for Resilience -- 3 The Need for Legal Responses -- 4 Concluding Observations -- Chapter 18 covid-19 and Research in International Law -- Chapter 19 A Narrative of Crises from the Perspective of a Young Scholar
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Mbengue, Makane Moïse Crisis Narratives in International Law Boston : BRILL,c2021 ISBN 9789004472358
Language:
English
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