Routledge Handbook of International Law and the Humanities
portes grátis
Routledge Handbook of International Law and the Humanities
Pahuja, Sundhya; Chalmers, Shane
Taylor & Francis Ltd
05/2021
488
Dura
Inglês
9780367420741
15 a 20 dias
1100
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction Practice, Craft and Ethos: Inheriting a Tradition Part 1: Formation 1. Modus Vivendi: Office of Transnational Jurisprudent 2. Life in the Ruins: International Law as Doctrine and Discipline 3. Receiving Traditions of Civility, Remaking Conditions of Cohabitation: A Genealogy of Politics, Law and Piety in South Asia 4. The atomics 5. Tender Images: Characters of Private International Law in the Humanities 6. A Training in Conduct Part 2: Sense 7. Absent Images of International Law 8. Listening about Law in the Sonic Arts: John Cage's 4'33" and Lawrence Abu Hamdan's Saydnaya (the missing 19dB) 9. Criminal Procedure and the Humanities: Questions of Method and Orientation 10. Wayfaring Methods 11. Foot Notes. Reflections on Method and Form 12. Critical Humanities and the Human of International Human Rights Law Part 3: World-Making 13. Certain (mis)Conceptions: Westphalian Origins, Portraiture and Wampum 14. The Travels of Human Rights: The UNESCO Human Rights Exhibition 1950-53 15. International Law, Literature and Worldmaking 16. Sunil Gangopadhyay's Lord-Healer of Lost Cases, with a Translators Afterword: Cultivating a Postcolonial Literary Legal Imagination 17. We Are Making a New World Part 4: History-Telling 18. The Time of Revolution: Decolonisation, Heterodox International Legal Historiography and the Problem of the Contemporary 19. A Double Take on Debt: Reparations Claims and Shifting Regimes of Visibility 20. 'The Object is to Frighten Him with Hope': Questioning the Tragic Emplotments of International Law and Decolonisation in the Chagos Archipelago 21. Contested Histories: Revisiting the Relationship between International Law and Slavery 22. 'Space is the Only Way to Go': The Evolution of the Extractivist Imaginary of International Law 23. International Law and the Production of New Resources: Lessons from the Colonisation of Mars 24. Revisiting Local Hero Part 5: Community 25. The Politics of Legibility: 'The Family' in International Human Rights Law 26. International Law at the Border: Refugee Deaths, the Necropolitical State and Sovereign Accountability 27. Towards a Carceral Geography of International Law 28. Law and Sacrifice in Australian Extra-Territorial Nation Spaces: The Residue of Empire 29. Living Together after Violent Conflict: Museum-Making as Lawful Truth-Making 30. The Meeting of Laws in Australian Children's Literature Part 6: Concepts for Our Times 31. International Law and the Humanities in the 'Anthropocene' 32. Who, or What, is the Human of International Humanitarian Law? 33. Automating Authority: The Human and Automation in Legal Discourse on the Meaningful Human Control of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems 34. Rainbow Family: Machine Listening, Improvisation and Access to Justice in International Family Law 35. In the Name of the Victim: Representing Victims in International Criminal Justice 36. A Sovereignty that is 'Useless to Fascism'
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems;Melbourne Law School;Citizenship amendment act;ANZAC Legend;Humanities;International Humanitarian Law;Indigenous international law;Vice Versa;Slave trade;International Law;UN;International Criminal Justice;Human Rights;International Criminal Law;European International Law;Meaningful Human Control;Immigration Detention;Machine Listening;UK Court;Gerard Ter Borch;Sunil Gangopadhyay;Sundhya Pahuja;Odious Debt;Inter-national Law;International Legal Scholars;Chagos Archipelago;Nuremberg IMT;Memory Square;Dark Princess
Introduction Practice, Craft and Ethos: Inheriting a Tradition Part 1: Formation 1. Modus Vivendi: Office of Transnational Jurisprudent 2. Life in the Ruins: International Law as Doctrine and Discipline 3. Receiving Traditions of Civility, Remaking Conditions of Cohabitation: A Genealogy of Politics, Law and Piety in South Asia 4. The atomics 5. Tender Images: Characters of Private International Law in the Humanities 6. A Training in Conduct Part 2: Sense 7. Absent Images of International Law 8. Listening about Law in the Sonic Arts: John Cage's 4'33" and Lawrence Abu Hamdan's Saydnaya (the missing 19dB) 9. Criminal Procedure and the Humanities: Questions of Method and Orientation 10. Wayfaring Methods 11. Foot Notes. Reflections on Method and Form 12. Critical Humanities and the Human of International Human Rights Law Part 3: World-Making 13. Certain (mis)Conceptions: Westphalian Origins, Portraiture and Wampum 14. The Travels of Human Rights: The UNESCO Human Rights Exhibition 1950-53 15. International Law, Literature and Worldmaking 16. Sunil Gangopadhyay's Lord-Healer of Lost Cases, with a Translators Afterword: Cultivating a Postcolonial Literary Legal Imagination 17. We Are Making a New World Part 4: History-Telling 18. The Time of Revolution: Decolonisation, Heterodox International Legal Historiography and the Problem of the Contemporary 19. A Double Take on Debt: Reparations Claims and Shifting Regimes of Visibility 20. 'The Object is to Frighten Him with Hope': Questioning the Tragic Emplotments of International Law and Decolonisation in the Chagos Archipelago 21. Contested Histories: Revisiting the Relationship between International Law and Slavery 22. 'Space is the Only Way to Go': The Evolution of the Extractivist Imaginary of International Law 23. International Law and the Production of New Resources: Lessons from the Colonisation of Mars 24. Revisiting Local Hero Part 5: Community 25. The Politics of Legibility: 'The Family' in International Human Rights Law 26. International Law at the Border: Refugee Deaths, the Necropolitical State and Sovereign Accountability 27. Towards a Carceral Geography of International Law 28. Law and Sacrifice in Australian Extra-Territorial Nation Spaces: The Residue of Empire 29. Living Together after Violent Conflict: Museum-Making as Lawful Truth-Making 30. The Meeting of Laws in Australian Children's Literature Part 6: Concepts for Our Times 31. International Law and the Humanities in the 'Anthropocene' 32. Who, or What, is the Human of International Humanitarian Law? 33. Automating Authority: The Human and Automation in Legal Discourse on the Meaningful Human Control of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems 34. Rainbow Family: Machine Listening, Improvisation and Access to Justice in International Family Law 35. In the Name of the Victim: Representing Victims in International Criminal Justice 36. A Sovereignty that is 'Useless to Fascism'
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems;Melbourne Law School;Citizenship amendment act;ANZAC Legend;Humanities;International Humanitarian Law;Indigenous international law;Vice Versa;Slave trade;International Law;UN;International Criminal Justice;Human Rights;International Criminal Law;European International Law;Meaningful Human Control;Immigration Detention;Machine Listening;UK Court;Gerard Ter Borch;Sunil Gangopadhyay;Sundhya Pahuja;Odious Debt;Inter-national Law;International Legal Scholars;Chagos Archipelago;Nuremberg IMT;Memory Square;Dark Princess