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Law 2013 - Cambridge University Press India

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Public international law 47Parochialism,Cosmopolitanism,and the Foundationsof International <strong>Law</strong>Edited by M. N. S. Sellers<strong>University</strong> of BaltimoreThis book examines the boundarybetween parochial and cosmopolitanjustice.ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory2012 228 x 152 mm 302pp978-0-521-51802-4 Hardback £60.00eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521518024The Role of Ethics inInternational <strong>Law</strong>Edited by Donald Earl Childress, IIIPepperdine <strong>University</strong> School of <strong>Law</strong>The purpose of this volume is to explorewhat role ethical discourse plays ininternational law.ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory2012 228 x 152 mm 290pp 1 table978-1-107-09655-4 Hardback £60.00eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9781107096554The <strong>Cambridge</strong>Companion toInternational <strong>Law</strong>Edited by James Crawford<strong>University</strong> of <strong>Cambridge</strong>and Martti Koskenniemi<strong>University</strong> of HelsinkiA concise, intellectually rigorous andpolitically and theoretically informedintroduction to the context, grammar,techniques and projects of internationallaw.<strong>Cambridge</strong> Companions to <strong>Law</strong>2012 228 x 152 mm 484pp 3 tables978-0-521-19088-6 Hardback £65.00978-0-521-14308-0 Paperback £27.99www.cambridge.org/9780521190886Forum Shoppingin InternationalAdjudicationThe Role of PreliminaryObjectionsLuiz Eduardo Ribeiro SallesGraduate Institute of International Studies,GenevaInternational adjudication ischanging and so is the internationallawyers’ toolbox. Forum Shopping inInternational Adjudication discusses therecent multiplication of internationaltribunals and focuses on widelyused procedural objections (namelypreliminary objections) as the meansto tackle the emerging phenomenon offorum shopping in public internationallaw.<strong>Cambridge</strong> Studies in International andComparative <strong>Law</strong><strong>2013</strong> 228 x 152 mm 325pp978-1-107-03596-6 Hardback c. £75.00Publication June <strong>2013</strong>www.cambridge.org/9781107035966State ResponsibilityThe General PartJames Crawford<strong>University</strong> of <strong>Cambridge</strong>James Crawford’s critical, in-depthreview of the responsibility of states foracts contrary to international law alsoexamines issues of dispute settlementin relation to responsibility and theconnection between institutions andrules. It reflects both the work of theILC (led by Crawford) and the numeroussubsequent developments.<strong>Cambridge</strong> Studies in International andComparative <strong>Law</strong><strong>2013</strong> 228 x 152 mm 550pp978-0-521-82266-4 Hardback c. £70.00Publication June <strong>2013</strong>www.cambridge.org/9780521822664New in PaperbackThe Individual inthe InternationalLegal SystemContinuity and Change inInternational <strong>Law</strong>Kate ParlettFreshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, ParisWith this generalised 2011 study ofthe development of the role of theindividual in international law, KateParlett makes a significant contributionto current ideas about non-state actorsin international law and provides asynthesised account of the individualin the international legal system inhistorical perspective.‘Kate Parlett’s analysis is both succinctand comprehensive, inasmuch as itcovers ‘the areas of international lawwhich have the clearest potentialto engage individuals’ … Theorganization of the reasoning in thethree … historical periods for each ofthe areas subject to scrutiny gives thebook a clear structure and allows thereader to draw parallels and identifydifferences in the direct comparisonbetween different fields of law.’Andreas Th. Müller, European Journal ofInternational <strong>Law</strong><strong>Cambridge</strong> Studies in International andComparative <strong>Law</strong>, 75<strong>2013</strong> 228 x 152 mm 3 tables978-1-107-61054-5 Paperback c. £22.99Publication February <strong>2013</strong>Also available978-0-521-19666-6 Hardback £74.00eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9781107610545Reparations andVictim Support inthe InternationalCriminal CourtConor McCarthy<strong>University</strong> of <strong>Cambridge</strong>Conor McCarthy explores the RomeStatute’s regime of victim redress,including its reparations regime andthe ICC Trust Fund for Victims, and askswhat role it can play alongside existingregimes for victim redress and whetherit has a contribution to make in theadministration of international criminaljustice.<strong>Cambridge</strong> Studies in International andComparative <strong>Law</strong>, 882012 228 x 152 mm 434pp978-1-107-01387-2 Hardback £70.00eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9781107013872State Immunity inInternational <strong>Law</strong>Xiaodong YangCTBTO Preparatory CommissionXiaodong Yang examines the casesin which a State can be sued in aforeign domestic court for commercialtransactions and other trading activities,employment and labour disputes,personal injuries and damage toproperty, confiscation of private propertyand violations of human rights.<strong>Cambridge</strong> Studies in International andComparative <strong>Law</strong>, 892012 228 x 152 mm 944pp978-0-521-84401-7 Hardback £95.00eBook availablewww.cambridge.org/9780521844017Global Public Interestin InternationalInvestment <strong>Law</strong>Andreas Kulick<strong>University</strong> of TübingenAndreas Kulick delineates a generaltheory of how public interest concernssuch as human rights or environmentalprotection should be included in therealm of international investment law.This book serves both scholars andpractitioners by stirring the academicdebate and providing practical guidancefor implementation.For regular email alerts visit www.cambridge.org/alerts

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