Introduction / Makane Moise Mbengue and Jean d'Aspremont -- The love of crisis / Jan Klabbers -- Crisis? What damned crisis? / Iain Scobbie -- Crisis narratives and the tale of our anxieties / Helene Ruiz Fabri -- Crisis and international law : a Third World approaches to international law perspective / B.S. Chimni -- Covid and the crisis mode in international legal scholarship / Frederic Megret -- Narratives of solidarity in times of crisis : tales from Africa / Makane Moise Mbengue -- International law as a crisis discourse : the peril of wordlessness / Jean d'Aspremont -- Covid-19 as a catalyst for the (re-)constitutionalisation of international law : one health, one Welfare / Anne Peters -- The Covid-19 pandemic crisis and international law : a constitutional moment, a tipping point or more of the same? / Yuval Shany -- Beyond war narratives : laying bare the structural violence of the pandemic / Eliana Cusato -- Repetitive renewal : Covid, canons and blinkers / Christian J. Tams -- International law and crisis narratives after the Covid-19 pandemic / Catherine Kessedjian -- Only once ... upon a time? / Laurence Boisson de Chazournes -- Crisis in international law : the kaleidoscopic world confronts a pandemic / Edith Brown Weiss -- How learned are our lessons? / Monica Pinto -- Hobbes and the plague doctors / Benedict Kingsbury -- The Covid-19 crisis, indigenous peoples, and international law. A vulnerability perspective / Malgosia Fitzmaurice -- Covid-19 and research in international law / Fuad Zarbiyev -- A narrative of crises from the perspective of a young scholar / Iga Joanna Jozefiak.
Summary:
"Few would quibble with the idea that the SARS-CoV-2 virus strain has caused a crisis that affects just about everybody on the planet. As lawyers active in the field of international law, our reading and teaching, writing and thinking, law-making and adjudication have been profoundly affected. These nineteen essays, individually and as a group offer a range of reactions and insights, touching on the impact on international law in its present incarnation and in a broader historic context, a snapshot on the state of thinking about international law. They offer a reminder too, as Benedict Kingsbury tells us, of the wisdom of others, of the Maori insight about our propensity to walk backwards into the future with our eyes on the past"--Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.