Development International Law – Part 3
13
“SPORTS LAW”: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL, COMPARATIVE, AND NATIONAL LAW AND GLOBAL DISPUTE RESOLUTION
Matthew J. Mitten & Hayden Opie
Tulane Law Review
Volume 85, Number 2, December 2010 p.269
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
14
China’s Development of International Economic Law and WTO Legal Capacity Building
Pasha L. Hsieh
Journal of International Economic Law
Volume 13, Number 4, December 2010 p.997-1036
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15
THOMAS GANGALE, The development of outer space: sovereignty and property rights in international space law
reviewed by Michael C. Mineiro
Annals of Air and Space Law
Volume 35, Part I, 2010 p.457
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
16
Trust Funds under International Law: Trustee Obligations of the United Nations and International Development Banks by Ilias Bantekas [TMC Asser Press, The Hague, The Netherlands and CUP, Cambridge, 2009, vii-xviii+306 pp, ISBN 978-90-6704-306-9, £60.00 (US$99.00) (h /bk)]
Luke Butler
International and Comparative Law Quarterly
Volume 59, Number 4, October 2010 p.1175-1176
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17
The Colonization of American Nature and the Early Development of International Law
Fonseca, Manuel Jiménez
Journal of the History of International Law
Volume 12, Number 2, 2010 p.189-225
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18
Fifteenth Annual Herbert and Justice Rose Luttan Rubin International Law Symposium: The Privatization of Development Assistance
New York University Journal of International Law and Politics
Volume 42, Number 4, Summer 2010
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19
Authors: Hans Christian Bugge, Christina Voigt (eds), Sustainable Development in International and National Law
REVIEW BY: MICHAEL BROWNE
International Trade and Business Law Review
Volume 13, 2010 p.314
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International Law from Below: Development, Social Movements and Third World Resistance (Balakrishnan Rajagopal)
Reviewed by John Reynolds
Palestine Yearbook of International Law
Volume 15, 2009 p.435
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21
Building Capacity for the Transnational Regulation of Migration
Cristina M. Rodrà guez
Columbia Law Review Sidebar
January-June 2010
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
Regulating immigration requires lawmakers to reach beyond a unilateral “gatekeeping”strategy defined by efforts to stop migration through law enforcement and economic coercion. In their contributions to the policy debate, scholars increasingly have emphasized the importance of addressing labor and illegal migration through bilateral and transnational frameworks-through accords that would recognize the interdependence of the United States and Mexico and engage our neighbor to the south directly through joint efforts to channel migratory flows. In this Essay, I seek to contribute to this strand of commentary by identifying the existing mechanisms of transnationalism and offering initial suggestions for their development, in the interest of building institutional capacity for meaningful bilateralism. These mechanisms consist of international diplomatic and information-sharing networks, cooperative ventures between administrative officials on both sides of the border, and transnational civil society networks developed to serve the needs of Mexican migrants. The cross-border Administrative law space these forms of organization create is occupied not just by international entities, but also by entanglements between the domestic institutions of the United States and Mexico. In assessing these networks, I emphasize that bilateralism should be shaped to promote burden-sharing, or to ensure that both sides of the bilateral relationship reap benefits and bear costs, in rough proportion.
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ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF Private International Law IN THE NETHERLANDS: FROM ASSER’S DAYS TO THE Codification OF DUTCH Private International Law (1910-2010)
P. Vlas
Netherlands International Law Review
Volume 57, Issue 2, August 2010 p.167-182
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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
Administrative law, Codification, Columbia Law Review, Development International Law, History of International Law, Private International Law.
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