Abstract

Acknowledgements Foreword by Simon Chesterman 1. Thinking International Law Critically: One Attitude, Three Perspectives (Prabhakar Singh and Benoit Mayer) SECTION I: POSTREALISM 2. Descendants of Realism? Policy-oriented International Lawyers as Guardians of Democracy (Hengameh Saberi) 3. Riddles of the Sands: Time, Power, and Legitimacy in International Law (John R. Morss) 4. The Welfarist Approach to International Law: An Appraisal (Rossana Deplano) 5. Revisiting the Role of the International Courts and Tribunals? (Prabhakar Singh) SECTION II: POSTCOLONIALISM 6. Towards a Post-colonial International Law (Antony Anghie) 7. A Universal History of Infamy: Human Rights, Eurocentrism, and Modernity as Crisis (Jose-Manuel Barreto) 8. 'Suffering' the Paradox of Rights? Critical Subaltern Historiography and the Genealogy of Empathy (Mark Toufayan) 9. The 'Magic Circle' of Rights Holders: Human Rights' Outsiders (Benoit Mayer) SECTION III: TRANSNATIONALISM 10. The Rise and Fall of 'International Man' (Frederic Megret) 11. The Human Right to Water as a 'Creature' of Global Administrative Law (Owen McIntyre) 12. Of Precedents and Ideology: Law-making by Investment Arbitration Tribunals (Rene Uruena) 13. Constitutionalism and Pluralism: Two Ways of Looking at Internationalism (Prabhakar Singh and Sonja Kubler) AFTERWORD 14. What's Critical about Critical International Law? Reflections on the Emancipatory Potential of International Legal Scholarship (Sebastien Jodoin and Katherine Lofts) Index

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