Denver Journal of International Law and Policy - 2009
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- Victims' participation rights within the International Criminal Court: a critical overview.
- Cautiously optimistic: economic liberalization and reconciliation in Rwanda's coffee sector.
- Foreign direct investment, trade, and China's competition laws.
- Hawala, money laundering, and terrorism finance: micro-lending as an end to illicit remittance.
- Multilateral environmental agreements: from Montreal to Kyoto - a theoretical approach to an improved climate change regime.
- Illegal renditions and improper treatment: an obligation to provide refugee remedies pursuant to the Convention Against Torture.
- Combating child sex tourism in Southeast Asia.
- Invisible borders: mapping out virtual law?
- Dissecting international legal compliance: an unfinished Odyssey.
- Immigration and immigration law after 9/11: getting it straight.
- Sacrificial lambs of globalization: child labor in the twenty-first century.
- Introductory essay: international law implications of the United States' 'war on terror'.
- Counter-terrorism and human rights: the emergence of a rule of customary int'l law from U.N. resolutions.
- War on terror or terror wars: the problem in defining terrorism.
- Darfur and the Crime of Genocide.
- Rights of action for private non-state actors in the WTO dispute settlement system.
- Doomed to be violated? The U.S.-Israeli clandestine end-user agreement and the second Lebanon war: lessons for the Convention on Cluster Munitions.
- Israel's invasion of Gaza in international law.
- The war on terror and international human rights: does Europe get it right?
- A woman's worth: accounting for women in the global market.
- A presumption of guilt: the unlawful enemy combatant and the U.S. war on terror.
- Nuclear weapons, human security, and international law.
- President Obama and the international criminal law of successor liability.
- "Like snow (falling) on a branch ...": international law influences on death penalty decisions and debates in the United States.