International Law
And Justice for All?

Volume 24, Issue 1

International law is the object of both great hope and great fear. In an era of unprecedented globalization, international legal institutions serve as vehicles for the facilitation of commerce and cooperation among nations. And in the last year, after the worst act of international crime in history, many view international law as a prerequisite for justice. Yet there is no doubt that the desire for a global legal order... (More)

International Law
Collateral Damage
Sacrificing Legitimacy in the Search for Justice
by Ratna Kapur

Trial by Fury?
The Fallacy of Bush's Military Tribunals
by Geoffrey Robertson

Food for Thought
Intellectual Property Rights, Food, and Biodiversity
by Geoffrey Tansey

Asylum for All
Refugee Protection in the 21st Century
by Ruud Lubbers

The Future of Law
Protecting the Rights of Civilians
by Anne-Marie Slaughter and William Burke-White

Chechen Chagrin
Human Rights in Chechnya
by Tariq Yasin

Bad Hair Day
Koizumi's Struggle in Japan
by Rina Fujii

Refugees or Migrants?
The Roma of Eastern Europe
by Anna Franekova

The Oils of War
Conlict in the Sudan
by Emily Dupraz

Tuvalu Little, Tuvalu Late
A Country Goes Under
by Genevieve Sheehan

Asian Invasion
Baseball’s Ambassadors
by Alexander Blenkinsopp

Pakistan's Dilemma
Breaking Links with the Past
by Benazir Bhutto

On the Horizon
The Dawn of a New Sino-Japanese Rivalry
by Milton Ezrati

Raising the Bar
Human-Rights Initiatives
by Chen Shui-Bian

Passing the Cup
The Meaning of the America's Cup at the Global Table
by Nick Smith

Learning Curve
The United States and the Future of Pakistan
by Melissa Dell

Bittersweet Harvest
The Debate over Genetically Modified Crops
by Honor Hsin

Reporting the World
Challenges for US Media
by Rick Kaplan

The Root of All Evil
The Economics of Civil Wars
by Philippe Le Billon

From the Front Lines
Journalism in Times of War
by Annabel McGoldrick and Jake Lynch

Another Hundred Years of Solitude?
Latin America after September 11
by Carlos Blanco