Laws of war Part 7
75
The United States as Occupying Power Over Portions of Iraq and Special Responsibilities Under the Laws of war
Jordan J. Paust
Suffolk Transnational Law Review
Volume 27, Number 1, Winter 2003 p.1
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76
The Role of the United States Military Lawyer in Projecting a Vision of the Laws of War
Kenneth Anderson
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 4, Number 2, Fall 2003 p.445
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77
THE LAWS OF WAR WAGED BETWEEN DEMOCRATIC STATES AND TERRORIST ORGANIZATIONS: REAL OR ILLUSIVE?
Emanuel Gross
Florida Journal of International Law
Volume 15, Number 4, Summer 2003 p.389
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
78
War and Enemy Status After 9/11: Attacks on the Laws of War
Jordan J. Paust
Yale Journal of International Law
Volume 28, Number 2, Summer 2003 p.325
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
79
It’s War, Jim, But Not As We Know It: A ”Reality-Check” for International Laws of War?
Elizabeth Chadwick
Crime, Law and Social Change
Volume 39, Number 3, April 2003 p.233-262
LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
80
LEGAL FEELING: THE PLACE OF INTIMACY IN INTERRACIAL MARRIAGE LAW
Nancy Bentley
Chicago-Kent Law Review
Volume 78, Number 2, 2003 p.773
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A will to stigmatize and prohibit black-white interracial marriage has been a defining national trait of U.S. culture. Although sex between the races was frequently tolerated, interracial mariage generated enormous opposition, especially after the Civil War. In order to understand this legal history, it is crucial to recognize the way a species of intimacy, the desire to marry, has the potential to shape legitimacy – to ratify or, conversely, to erode the authority of law itself. Jurgen Habermas’s theory of the importance of the Intimsphare to the public sphere helps to explain the force of marital desire in legal history. As Habermas argues, the genre of the novel is instrumental in creating the public power of private feeling. A 1901 novel by African-American author Charles Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition, illuminates the ironic ability of the desire for legal marriage to challenge existing marriage laws.
81
STRANGERS TO THE CONSTITUTION?: RESIDENT ALIENS, MILITARY TRIBUNALS, AND THE LAWS OF WAR
Adeno Addis
Valparaiso University Law Review
Volume 37, Number 2, Spring 2003 p.627
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82
The Laws of War and Humanitarian Law: A Turbulent Vista
Edwin M. Smith
Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations
Volume 9, Number 1, January-March 2003 p.115
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83
Assessing Claims to Revise the Laws of War
W. Michael Reisman
American Journal of International Law
Volume 97, Number 1, January 2003 p.82
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84
Whose Air Is It Anyway? The Federal-State Tug-of-War Over Administration of the Clean Air Act and Other Environmental Laws
DENISE W. KENNEDY, ROBERT T. CONNERY
Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Institute Proceedings
Volume 49, 2003 p.24-1
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85
A Theory of the Laws of War
Eric A. Posner
University of Chicago Law Review
Volume 70, Number 1, Winter 2003 p.297
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Conclusion
Notes
See Also
References and Further Reading
About the Author/s and Reviewer/s
Author: international
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