Contributors
Introduction
1. Conceptualizing Comparative International Law
Anthea Roberts, Paul Stephan, Pierre-Hugues Verdier & Mila Versteeg
Part 1: Comparative International Law and Related Fields: Comparative Politics, Foreign Relations Law, and International Relations
2. Methodological Guidance: How to Select and Develop Comparative International Law Case Studies
Katerina Linos
3. Comparative International Law, Foreign Relations Law and Fragmentation: Can the Center Hold?
Paul B. Stephan
4. Why Comparative International Law Needs International Relations Theory
Daniel Abebe
Part 2: International Lawyers, the Academy, and Competing Conceptions of International Law
5. The Many Fields of (German) International Law
Nico Krisch
6. Crimea and the South China Sea: Connections and Disconnects Among Chinese, Russian, and Western International Lawyers
Anthea Roberts
7. "Shioki (Control)" "Fuyo (Dependency)," and Sovereignty: The Status of the Ryukyu Kingdom in Early-Modern and Modern Times
Masaharu Yanagihara
Part 3: Comparative International Law and International Institutions
8. Comparative International Law Within, Not Against, International Law: Lessons from the International Law Commission
Mathias Forteau
9. The Continuing Impact of French Legal Culture on the International Court of Justice
Mathilde Cohen
Part 4: Comparative International Law and Domestic Institutions: Legislatures and Executives
10. International Law in National Legal Systems: An Empirical Investigation
Pierre-Hugues Verdier & Mila Versteeg
11. Objections to Treaty Reservations: A Comparative Approach to Decentralized Interpretation
Tom Ginsburg
12. Intelligence Communities and International Law: A Comparative Approach
Ashley S. Deeks
13. National Legislatures: The Foundations of Comparative International Law
Kevin L. Cope & Hooman Movassagh
Part 5: Comparative International Law and Domestic Institutions: National Courts
14. International Law in Chinese Courts During the Rise of China
Congyan Cai
15. The Democratizing Force of International Law: Human Rights Adjudication by the Indian Supreme Court Neha Jain
16. Case Law in Russian Approaches to International Law: Sovereign Cautiousness of a Semi-Peripheral Great Power
Lauri Mälksoo
17. Doing Away with Capital Punishment in Russia: International Law and the Pursuit of Domestic Constitutional Goals
Bakhtiyar Tuzmukhamedov
Part 6: Comparative International Law and Human Rights
18. Comparative Views on the Right to Vote in International Law: the Case of Prisoners' Disenfranchisement Shai Dothan
19. When Law Migrates: Refugees in Comparative International Law
Jill I. Goldenziel
20. An Asymmetric Comparative International Law Approach to Treaty Interpretation: The CEDAW Committee's Tolerance of the Scandinavian States' Progressive Deviation
Alec Knight
21. Comparative International Law and Human Rights: A Value-Added Approach
Christopher McCrudden
22. CEDAW in National Courts: A Case Study in Operationalizing Comparative International Law Analysis in a Human Rights Context
Christopher McCrudden
23. The Great Promise of Comparative Public Law for Latin America: Towards ius commune americanum? Alejandro Rodiles
Part 7: Comparative International Law, Investment, and Law of the Sea
24. Who Cares about Regulatory Space in BITs? A Comparative International Approach
Tomer Broude, Yoram Z. Haftel & Alexander Thompson
25. Africa and the Rethinking of International Investment Law: About the Elaboration of the Pan-African Investment Code
Makane Moïse Mbengue & Stefanie Schacherer
26. Not So Treacherous Waters of International Maritime Law: Islamic Law States and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea
Emilia Justyna Powell
Index