Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: March 2023

Case Western Reserve University School of Law
ISSN 0008-7254


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 422

January 01, 2010

  • A social movement for privacy/against surveillance? Some difficulties in engendering mass resistance in a land of twitter and tweets.

  • Protecting antiquities and saving the universal museum: a necessary compromise between the conflicting ideologies of cultural property.

  • Using WTO countervailing duty law to combat illegally subsidized Chinese enterprises operating in a nonmarket-economy: deciphering the writing on the wall.

  • International ice hockey: player poaching and contract dispute.

  • The definition of the crime of aggression: lessons not-learned.

  • 'Secretary or General? The U.N. Secretary-General in World Politics' & 'Law and Practice of the United Nations, Documents and Commentary'.

  • March 22, 2010

  • Is lawfare worth defining? Report of the Cleveland experts meeting September 11, 2010.

  • The curious career of lawfare.

  • Lawfare or strategic communications?

  • Lawfare: a rhetorical analysis.

  • Does lawfare need an apologia?

  • Lawfare: a war worth fighting.

  • On legal subterfuge and the so-called 'lawfare' debate.

  • The dangers of lawfare.

  • Lawfare: where justice meets peace.

  • Lawfare and international tribunals: a question of definition? A reflection on the creation of the 'Khmer Rouge tribunal'.

  • Whose lawfare is it, anyway?

  • The Gaza Strip: Israel, its foreign policy, and the Goldstone Report.

  • Illustrating illegitimate lawfare.

  • Finding facts but missing the law: the Goldstone Report, Gaza and lawfare.

  • Gaza, Goldstone, and lawfare.

  • Litigating the Arab-Israeli conflict in U.S. courts: critiquing the lawfare critique.

  • 'Lawfare' in the war on terrorism: a reclamation project.

  • January 01, 2011

  • The myth of divided loyalties: defending detainees and the Constitution in the Guantanamo Military Commissions.

  • Mission creep in military lawyering.

  • Anti-war & anti-Gitmo: military expression and the dilemma of licensed professionals in uniform.

  • Organizational management of conflicting professional identities.

  • Divided loyalties of health professionals.

  • American vertigo: 'dual use,' prison physicians, research, and Guantanamo.

  • Divided loyalties: ethical challenges for America's law enforcement in post 9/11 America.

  • 'New rules for new wars' international law and just war doctrine for irregular war.

  • A new twist on an old story: lawfare and the mixing of proportionalities.

  • A memory of justice: the unexpected place of Lviv in international law - a personal history.

  • Equal accessibility for sign language under the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

  • Justice for all: protecting the translation rights of defendants in international war crime tribunals.

  • Tipping the scale: is the Special Tribunal for Lebanon international enough to override state official immunity?

  • Stem cell tourism: the challenge and promise of international regulation of embryonic stem cell-based therapies.

  • March 22, 2011

  • 'The crisis in the implementation of international law'.

  • The evolution of international law: arcs and cycles.

  • An age of extremes: eight challenges.

  • Challenges posed by the new terrorism and the changing nature of war.

  • After Osama Bin Laden: assassination, terrorism, war, and international law.

  • A ten-year retrospective on the law and the war on terrorism: the role of Army reserve citizen-lawyers.

  • September 22, 2012

  • Power and constraint: national security law after the 2012 election.

  • An insufficiently accountable presidency: some reflections on Jack Goldsmith's 'Power and Constraint'.

  • Executive power in a war without end: Goldsmith, the erosion of executive authority on detention, and the end of the War on Terror.

  • War without end? Legal wrangling without end.

  • Presidential foreign policy: an opportunity for international law education.

  • The War Powers Resolution at 40: still an unconstitutional, unnecessary, and unwise fraud that contributed directly to the 9/11 attacks.

  • The War Powers Resolution and public opinion.