Events the Force of International Law
edited by Fleur Johns, Richard Joyce, and Sundhya Pahuja.
- Oxon : Routledge, 2011.
- 289 p.
Table of Contents: Introduction Chapter 1. The International Law Chapter 2. Absolute Contingency and the Prescriptive Force of International Law, Chiapas - Valladolid, ca.1550 Chapter 3. Latin Roots: the Force of International Law as Event Chapter 4. Westphalia: Event, Memory, Myth Chapter 5. The Force of a Doctrine: Art. 38 of the PCIJ Statutes and the Sources of International Law Chapter 6. Paris 1793 and 1871 :Levee en Masse as Event Chapter 7. Decolonisation and the Eventness of International Law Chapter 8. Post-War to New World Order and Post-Socialist Transition: 1989 as Pseudo-Event Chapter 9. The Liberation of Nelson Mandela: Anatomy of A 'Happy Event' in International Law Chapter 10. Political Trials as Events Chapter 11. The Tokyo Women's Tribunal and the Turn to Fiction Chapter 12. Many Hundred Thousand Bodies Later : An Analysis of The 'Legacy' of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda Chapter 13. From the State to The Union: International Law And The Appropriation of the New Europe Chapter 14. The Emergence of the WTO: Another Triumph of Corporate Capitalism? Chapter 15. The WTO and Development: Victory of 'Rational Choice'? Chapter 16. Protesting the WTO in Seattle: Transnational Citizen Action, International Law and the Event Chapter 17. Globalism, Memory and 9/11: A Critical Third World Perspective Chapter 18. Provoking International Law: War and Regime Change in Iraq Chapter 19. The Torture Memos Index