“The Trap (a dialogue)” in Law and Critique
William E. Conklin, “The Trap (a dialogue)” in Law and Critique13: 1-28.
Windsor Law Faculty Author: William E. Conklin
William E. Conklin, “The Trap (a dialogue)” in Law and Critique13: 1-28.
Windsor Law Faculty Author: William E. Conklin
Paul Ocheje, “Norms, Law and Social Change: Nigeria's Anti-Corruption Struggle, 1999-2017.”
Windsor Law Faculty Author: Paul Ocheje
Myra J. Tawfik, “Copyright History as Book History: The Law in Multidisciplinary Context”, in Torremans, P., ed., Research Handbook on Copyright Law
Second Edition, (Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2017)
Jeff Berryman, “Mitigation, Apology and the Quantification of Non-Pecuniary Damages” (2017) 7:3 Onati Socio-Legal Series; The Place of Apology in Law 528, online: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3029460
Citation: Bill Conklin, “’The Preface’, Hegel’s Legal Philosophy, and the Crises of His Time” in Jonathan Lavery et al (eds) Ideas under Fire, (Soft-cover edn; Madison/Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2017; New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017), at 161-190.
Windsor Law Faculty Author: Bill Conklin
Citation: Paul Ocheje, “Creating an Anti-Corruption Norm in Africa: Critical Reflections on Legal Instrumentalization for Development” (2017) 10 Law and Development Review (forthcoming)
Windsor Law Faculty Author: Paul Ocheje
Manarin, Brian "Forensic Evidence in Context: Cases, Materials and Commentaries" (2017)
In Forensic Evidence in Context: Cases, Materials and Commentaries, Brian Manarin has collected a wide array of case law, journal articles and other valuable materials with a view to better preparing students and professionals alike for the time when they will be called upon to showcase their forensic talents.
A special issue of the Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice (WYAJ) titled, Conspiring in Cairo & Canada: Placing TWAIL Scholarship and Praxis, has been published.
Guest edited by Sujith Xavier, Amar Bhatia, Usha Natarajan & John Reynolds, this is an important issue that examines many aspects of Third World Approaches to International Law. The issue also includes an article by Windsor Law professor, Sujith Xavier.
Xavier, Sujith “Learning From Below: Theorising Global Governance Through Ethnographies And Critical Reflections From The Global South” (2016) 33 (3) Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 229
Abstract: