This article, featuring Terence Halliday, argues that international legal regimes can promote human rights and accountability, but their effectiveness is limited in authoritarian regimes like China.
This analysis, written by Jothie Rajah, shows how authoritarian politics deploy rule of law discourse through the case of Singapore’s fight against “fake news”.
The article’s authors, including Janice Nadler, consider evidence-based strategies to reduce meat consumption by promoting animal welfare.
In this chapter, Tera Agyepong analyzes how racialized constructions of innocence based on race and gender intersect with the U.S. juvenile justice system.
Anna Reosti examines the role of the rental housing search and application process in producing economic and social disadvantages for renters with discrediting background records.
This article explores the challenges of representing transnational law in the context of drone warfare, arguing that traditional legal categories are inadequate to capture the complexities of transnational legal issues.
This article analyzes the Western legal thinking that legitimized conquest as legal and decreed that lands inhabited by native people as terra nullius.
This article by Terence Halliday and Sida Liu analyzes the role of dignity in the struggle for legal freedom in China.
Featuring Terence Halliday, this article elaborates in three ways the call for a renewal of social science approaches to international law.
Featuring Tom Ginsburg, this article provides a comparative analysis of the constitutional law of presidential impeachment in the U.S. and other countries.
This article with Shari Seidman Diamond summarizes the findings from a survey of legal professionals regarding the dramatic decline in civil and criminal jury trials.