Development International Law – Part 18

Development International Law – Part 18

 

162

THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE DOCTRINES OF ATTRIBUTION AND DUE DILIGENCE IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
Jan Arno Hessbruegge
New York University Journal of International Law and Politics
Volume 36, Number 2/3, Winter/Spring 2004 p.265

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

163

Advancing Indigenous Rights at the United Nations: Strategic Framing and Its Impact on the Normative Development of International Law
Rhiannon Morgan
Social & Legal Studies
Volume 13, Number 4, December 2004 p.481-500

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

164

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE MEETS GLOBALIZATION AND THE MODERN WORKFORCE
Deborah Maranville
Santa Clara Law Review
Volume 44, Number 4, 2004 p.1129

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This article considers the impact of globalization and changes in the workforce on the unemployment insurance system, as illustrated by events leading up to recent amendments to Washington State’s Unemployment Insurance system. Changes in international trade rules impacted the economic situation in which the Boeing Company operates and gave Boeing both the incentive and the ability to threaten to assemble its next generation jet outside Washington State, if its demands for changes to Washington’s unemployment insurance system were not met. The author argues first that globalization transforms “federalism”arguments, making it difficult to assign taxing and administration of social welfare programs to either nations, or sub-national units, like American states. Second, she argues that the entry of women into the modern work force makes it important to accommodate carework in the unemployment insurance system. Reconceptualizing care work as a form of “economic development”may assist us in developing needed arguments for accommodating carework. In light of the effects of globalization, social movements and advocates concerned with unemployment insurance will require an increasingly sophisticated understanding of the links among disparate areas of the law.

165

Hersch Lauterpacht and the Development of International Criminal Law
Martti Koskenniemi
Journal of International Criminal Justice
Volume 2, Number 3, September 2004 p.810-825

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166

A Positive Right to Protection for Children
Tamar Ezer
Yale Human Rights & Development Law Journal
Volume 7, 2004

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Concepts that are useful in other areas of human rights break down in the context of children. Because children are dependent on adults for their development, they are an anomaly in the liberal legal order, which views negative rights as implying fully rational, autonomous individuals that can exercise free choice. This Article argues for a positive right to protection for children, rooted in dignity, by probing the problematic nature of the positive/negative rights duality and exploring alternate legal approaches to protecting children’s rights in both international and comparative law. The adoption of positive rights for children would help assure adequate protection, which the current American legal regime, as typified by the case DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services, fails to do.

167

Book Reviews and Notices
Irish Jurist
Volume 38, 2003 p.393

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Hood, The Death Penalty, A Worldwide Perspective; O’Leary, Employment Law at the European Court of Justice. Judicial Structures, Policies and Processes; Dillon, International Trade and Economic Law and the European Union; Mousourakis, The Historical and Institutional Context of Roman Law; Laurie, Genetic Privacy: A Challenge to Medico-Legal Norms; Healy, with a biographical introduction by Charles Lysaght, The Old Munster Circuit; Asouzu, International commercial arbitration and African States: Practice, Participation, and Institutional Development; Markesinis and Unberath, The German Law of Torts, A Comparative Treatise; Steiner, French Legal Method; Kilcommins and O’Donnell (eds), Alcohol, Society and Law; Lynch-Fannon, Working Within Two Kinds of Capitalism

168

THE ROLE OF THE RED CROSS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF International humanitarian law
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 5, Number 1, Summer 2004

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169

The International Committee of the Red Cross and the Development of International humanitarian law
François Bugnion
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 5, Number 1, Summer 2004 p.191

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170

The International Committee of the Red Cross and Its Contribution to the Development of International Humanitarian Law in Specialized Instruments
Knut Dürmann & Louis Maresca
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 5, Number 1, Summer 2004 p.217

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171

Russian Floating Nuclear Reactors: Lacunae in Current International Environmental and Maritime Law and the Need for Proactive International Cooperation in the Development of Sustainable Energy Sources
Douglas John Steding
Pacific Rim Law & Policy Journal
Volume 13, Number 3, June 2004 p.711

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Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

Development International Law, International Criminal Law, International Humanitarian Law, International commercial arbitration, International humanitarian law.


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