International institutions Part 8

International institutions Part 8

 

96

THE INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW SYSTEM: NEW ACTORS, NEW INSTITUTIONS, NEW SOURCES
Graeme B. Dinwoodie
Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review
Volume 10, Number 2, Special Issue 2006 p.205

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

97

Islamic Financial Structures as Alternatives to International Loan Agreements: Challenges for U.S. Financial Institutions
Babback Sabahi
Review of Banking and Financial Law
Volume 24, 2005 p.487

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

98

THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN ACTORS AS A DETERMINANT OF THE EVOLUTION OF Administrative law IN International institutions
Eyal Benvenisti
Law and Contemporary Problems
Volume 68, Numbers 3 & 4, Summer/Autumn 2005 p.319

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

99

International Human Rights: Neglect of Perspectives from African Institutions
Rachel Murray
International and Comparative Law Quarterly
Volume 55, Number 1, January 2006 p.193-204

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

100

Deontological retributivism and the legal practice of international jurisprudence: the case of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
FINK, JASON BENJAMIN
Journal of African Law
Volume 49, Number 2, October 2005 p.101-131

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

Contemporary international criminal jurisprudence has fashioned a legal paradigm encoding the crime of genocide as a violation of moral law. Structured by an ethos of deontological retributivism, it has posited a set of institutional and conceptual mechanisms designed to situate and stabilize the meaning of genocide. The articulation of this paradigm has entailed the bracketing or suspending of alternative discursive strategies and institutions, particularly those inscribed with a traditional; contextual value. Configuring the social fact of genocide under a normative framework of retribution often fails to address the realities and needs of the local populations who have suffered through severe social trauma. In the intensely unstable space of post-genocidal societies, such as Rwanda, the mandating of formal legal structures by international judicial authorities may constitute a genuine barrier to the critical appropriation of the fact of genocide into the communal memory by imposing a set of privileged frameworks without recognizing the formal integrity and constructive potential of local strategies.

101

The Effectiveness and Legitimacy of International Environmental Institutions
Steinar Andresen and Ellen Hey
International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics
Volume 5, Number 3, September 2005 p.211-226

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

102

The Impact of Leadership Turnover and Domestic Institutions on International Cooperation
FIONA McGILLIVRAY and ALASTAIR SMITH
Journal of Conflict Resolution
Volume 49, Number 5, October 2005 p.639

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

103

Saving the Whales in the New Millennium: International Institutions, Recent Developments and the Future of International Whaling Policies
Cinnamon Pinon Carlarne
Virginia Environmental Law Journal
Volume 24, Number 1, 2005 p.1

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

104

ACTIVITIES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW INSTITUTIONS AT THE HAGUE/ACTIVI TES DKS INSTITUTIONS DE DROIT INTERNATIONAL A LA HAYE
Hague Yearbook of International Law
Volume 17, 2004

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

105

Malgosia Fitzmaurice/Dan Sarooshi (eds.): Issues of State Responsibility before International judicial institutions
Tams
German Yearbook of International Law
Volume 47, 2004 p.976

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

106

ACTIVITIES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW INSTITUTIONS AT THE HAGUE/ACTIVITES DES INSTITUTIONS DE DROIT INTERNATIONAL A LA HAYE
Hague Yearbook of International Law
Volume 16, 2003

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

107

National Human Rights Institutions: The Ombudsman and its Hybrid Versions–The Emerging Actors on the Constitutionalism Scene, Linda C. Reif, The Ombudsman, Good Governance, and the international Human Rights System
Vijayashri Sripati
Human Rights Quarterly
Volume 27, Number 3, August 2005 p.1137

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

108

PRIVATE COMPLAINANTS AND International Organizations : A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE INDEPENDENT INSPECTION MECHANISMS IN INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Daniel D. Bradlow
Georgetown Journal of International Law
Volume 36, Number 2, Winter 2005 p.403

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

109

Governance of International Institutions: A Review of the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation’s Citizen Submissions Process
David L. Markell
North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation
Volume 30, Number 4, Summer 2005 p.759

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110

International Substitutes for Domestic Institutions: Bilateral Investment Treaties and Governance
Tom Ginsburg
International Review of Law and Economics
Volume 25, Issue 1, March 2005 p.107-123

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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, Bilateral Investment Treaties, International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, International Organizations, International institutions, International judicial institutions.


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