Department of Law: Recent submissions
Now showing items 21-40 of 875
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International health and safety standards after Brexit
(Pluto Journals, 2021-01-01) -
MASS DEFORESTATION AS A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY?
(2023-10-27)This article examines whether mass deforestation could be prosecuted as a crime against humanity under Article 7 of the Rome Statute. It does so in respect of the situation in the Brazilian Legal Amazon in 2019-2021, where ... -
State Crime and Civil Activism On the Dialectics of Repression and Resistance
(Routledge, 2019-04-22)State Crime and Civil Activism explores the work of non-government organisations (NGOs) challenging state violence and corruption in six countries – Colombia, Tunisia, Kenya, Turkey, Myanmar and Papua New Guinea. -
"The Sexual Subaltern and Law: Postcolonial Queer Imaginaries”
(New York University Press, 2024)In this chapter I discuss the significance of Spivak’s notion of epistemic violence and the accompanying imperial formations of the subject for contemporary LGBT rights struggles and queer critique. Queer critique has ... -
#MeToo, Speech and Defamation
(New York University, 2024)In this chapter, we look at three high profile #MeToo defamation cases following public allegations of sexual harassment: Meesha Shafi’s allegations against Ali Zafar in Pakistan; Priya Ramani’s allegations against M.J. ... -
Neo-Systems Theory and Jurisprudence
(Springer Nature, 2023) -
A BIT of Protection for Non-Fungible Tokens: Digital Assets as a Catalyst for Economic Growth
(Brill Academic Publishers, 2024-03-04) -
ADAPTING A HUMAN RIGHTS-BASED FRAMEWORK TO INFORM MILITARIES’ ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES
(Saint Louis University, 24-05-2024)Key global powers are engaged in the development of artificial intelligence (“AI”) for military purposes, and it is widely accepted that the development and deployment of AI tools will lead to a revolution in military ... -
Who is the Subject of (Non) Human Rights?
(Edward Elgar Publishing (EEP), 23-04-2024)This chapter interrogates the concept of the subject of rights and questions whether Jacques Rancière’s work could be used to understand and mobilize the subjectification of non-humans in the context of a ‘pluralization ... -
The Nazi Looted Art Restitution Claim: An exploration of claimant interests through claimant voice
(The Institute of Art & Law, 01-04-2024)