330 research outputs found

    Democracy without Sovereignty: The Global Vocation of Political Ethics

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      “Democracy without Sovereignty: The Global Vocation of Political Ethics', w/ Robert Howse inThe Shifting Allocation of Authority in International Law: Considering Sovereignty, Supremacy and Subsidiarity (Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany, eds., Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2008) at pp.163-19

    The European Court of Human Rights

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    No abstract available

    Democracy without Sovereignty: The Global Vocation of Political Ethics

    No full text
      “Democracy without Sovereignty: The Global Vocation of Political Ethics', w/ Robert Howse inThe Shifting Allocation of Authority in International Law: Considering Sovereignty, Supremacy and Subsidiarity (Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany, eds., Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2008) at pp.163-19

    Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany (eds), Multi-sourced equivalent norms in international law, Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2011

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    Drobysz Sonia. Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany (eds), Multi-sourced equivalent norms in international law, Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2011. In: Annuaire français de droit international, volume 56, 2010. pp. 999-1000

    Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany (eds), Multi-sourced equivalent norms in international law, Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2011

    No full text
    Drobysz Sonia. Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany (eds), Multi-sourced equivalent norms in international law, Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2011. In: Annuaire français de droit international, volume 56, 2010. pp. 999-1000

    A Conversation with Mark Zuckerberg and Yuval Noah Harari

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    MZ shares the third conversation of his 2019 personal challenge. He sat down with Yuval Noah Harari, historian and author of Sapiens, Homo Deus, and 21 Lessons For the 21st Century.https://epublications.marquette.edu/zuckerberg_files_videos/1287/thumbnail.jp

    A Different Departure: A Reply to Shany\u27s Redrawing Maps, Manipulating Demographics: On Exchange of Populated Territories and Self-Determination

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    Anyone reading Yuval Shany\u27s response to my article, The Blessing of Departure -- Exchange of Populated Territories: The Lieberman Plan as an Abstract Exercise in Demographic Transformation, would hardly characterize it as agreement. In part this is because Shany builds his case by assuming I am saying something about self-determination that misses -- at least misplaces -- my real point. This is unfortunate, both as it masks the fact that Shany and I actually agree transfers can be legal, and it distracts attention from the points of real, substantive disagreement. The misreading is not an accident, rather the product of a patterned view. The points of disagreement, center on: whether transfer is a harm per se; whether the presence of a minority affects the state\u27s power to transfer; whether there is a positive right not to be denationalized; and whether there is a hierarchy of rights

    Introducing a sliding-scale of obligations to address the fundamental inequality between armed groups and states?

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    In a debate with Prof. Yuval Shany, the author argues that the equality of belligerents in international humanitarian law of non-international armed conflicts should be abandoned, because it either subjects many armed groups to unrealistic requirements they cannot comply with or it limits the obligations of governmental forces to minimal obligations. The author provides examples of fields in which IHL of non-international armed conflicts, which becomes increasingly similar to IHL of international armed conflicts, is unrealistic for most armed groups. The author suggest rather a sliding-scale of obligations for armed groups, that will increase according to the intensity of violence and the degree of organization of the group
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