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Introduction: To Remember and Smile, in The Character of International Law: A Festschrift for Rob Cryer (Emma J. Breeze, Mark Drumbl, Gerry Simpson & Marianne Wade eds., 2025)
Professor Robert Cryer was a foundational voice in modern international criminal law. This book celebrates his character, his life, his work, and his influence.
The book is a Festschrift of love and admiration to a voice that is dearly missed. Fittingly, the book also continues to voice the many conversations that Rob started. It thereby doubles as a critical examination of the life of international law.
The book constellates 17 expertly-authored chapters nurtured by four editors through five distinctive sections, each of which reflects on the character of international law. These sections, presented as acts, are: discipline and borders, (re)imagination and continuity, violence and reckoning, acoustics and storytelling, and friendship and kindness.
A wide gamut of touchpoints dovetails into a beautifully eclectic medley. These include criminal law, the law of war, music and harm, gender-based violence, nuclear weapons and artificial intelligence, law after war, the crime of aggression, drones and targets, the domestication of international law, and the role of law in inter-state relations. The book journeys to many places, including Japan, Bosnia and Ukraine, while reflecting on the role of teaching and mentorship in the life of international law.https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/fac_books/1215/thumbnail.jp
Reconsidering Off-Label Pediatric COVID-19 Vaccination
Off-label vaccination is not a widespread public health strategy. Structural responses are also necessary, like the American Academy of Pediatrics publishing its own vaccine schedule and filing a lawsuit against HHS challenging the legality of the Secretary’s decision to remove healthy children and pregnant people from the CDC immunization schedules. However, vaccinating children off-label is an ethically and legally supportable tool at a time when other tools are being removed from the toolkit. It is a decision between parents and trusted pediatricians that may also be involved for other vaccines as the regulatory and public health administrative landscape evolves and until policy priorities from federal health care agency leaders return to evidence-based public health
Wiant, Lawlor, and Shibib
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/scholarcelebration2025/1033/thumbnail.jp
Cosby and Students
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/scholarcelebration2025/1038/thumbnail.jp
Parella and Stanton
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/scholarcelebration2025/1039/thumbnail.jp
Christensen, Wilson, and Hasbrouck
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/scholarcelebration2025/1047/thumbnail.jp
Faculty Publications Display
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/scholarcelebration2025/1075/thumbnail.jp
The Pathology of Passivity: Shareholder Passivity as a False Narrative in Corporate Law, in Hidden Fallacies in Corporate Law and Financial Regulation (Alexandra Andhov et al. eds., 2025)
Featuring incisive research from preeminent scholars in the field, this seminal work interrogates long-standing assumptions and beliefs that have remained unexamined for decades. Taking a novel approach, the book serves as both a conceptual \u27deconstruction\u27 and a foundation for future research directions. Each chapter delves deep into the often-overlooked origins, mechanics and implications of outdated or misleading concepts (termed \u27fallacies\u27) that form the backbone of contemporary corporate and securities laws, financial regulations and related domains. Beyond simply identifying these fallacies, the authors illustrate the profound implications of recalibrating our analytic perspectives. By expanding the spectrum of inquiry and moving along multiple continuums – such as public to private, micro to macro, transactional to structural, individual to systemic, and static to dynamic – this volume underscores the transformative potential of re-envisioning the fundamentals of these fields. An essential read, this book promises to be a catalyst for change and a must-have for anyone committed to staying at the forefront of law and policy.https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/fac_books/1198/thumbnail.jp