Arnulf Becker Lorca

ORCID: 0000-0002-0767-7634
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • International Law and Human Rights
  • Historical and Contemporary Political Dynamics
  • Global Peace and Security Dynamics
  • International Law and Aviation
  • Corporate Law and Human Rights
  • International Arbitration and Investment Law
  • Comparative constitutional jurisprudence studies
  • Indigenous Peoples' Rights and Law
  • American Constitutional Law and Politics
  • Human Rights and Development
  • European Political History Analysis
  • Judicial and Constitutional Studies
  • International Labor and Employment Law
  • Historical Economic and Legal Thought
  • Conflict of Laws and Jurisdiction
  • Australian History and Society
  • Legal Language and Interpretation
  • International Relations in Latin America
  • Historical Economic and Social Studies
  • Legal processes and jurisprudence
  • Political and Economic history of UK and US
  • Hispanic-African Historical Relations
  • Political and Social Dynamics in Chile and Latin America
  • Political Systems and Governance
  • Comparative and International Law Studies

European University Institute
2024

Brown University
2011-2017

John Brown University
2012-2017

Conventionally, self-determination is understood to have evolved in a linear progression from political principle during World War I into an international right after II. The history of the before 1945 thus part ‘pre-history’. This article explores that ‘pre-history’ and finds conventional narrative unconvincing. During first three decades 20th century particular interwar period, non-Western lawyers, politicians, activists articulated law claims support demand for self-government. In this...

10.1093/ejil/chu033 article EN European Journal of International Law 2014-05-01

Abstract The climate and refugee crises, of course a global pandemic, attest to the limits that an international order based on sovereign coexistence imposes efforts tackle problems. Not only members civil society, but also states invoke justice overcome imposed by sovereignty enable multilateral cooperation. But what counts as just solution problems? This article shows sharp North–South divide emerging when South demands equitable solutions are redistributive from North South. As opposes...

10.1093/ia/iiac315 article EN International Affairs 2023-01-09

Journal Article On international law and Gaza: critical reflections Get access Tor Krever, Krever University of Cambridge, Faculty Law Girton College Corresponding author. Email: tkk24@cam.ac.uk https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4829-0356 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Marina Veličković, Veličković Warwick Frédéric Mégret, Mégret McGill Karen Engle, Engle Texas School Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Aoláin Minnesota Robert Knox, Knox Liverpool Shahd Hammouri,...

10.1093/lril/lrae012 article EN London Review of International Law 2024-07-01

Alejandro Álvarez's professional trajectory forces us to rethink the traditional modes of reading and writing history international law. Álvarez was central development modern He also happened be a Latin American lawyer. Should we interpret his work life against background intellectual political Europe? Are contexts that relate crisis European balance power or rise nationalism only ones explain emergence legal discourse? This article situates scholarship within intellectual, economic,...

10.1017/s0922156506003694 article EN Leiden Journal of International Law 2006-12-01

Abstract The historical processes through which international law became, conceptually, a universal legal order and, geographically, an with global scope of validity, are long and complex. These transformations, began to appear during the second half nineteenth century, did not end until post-War-World-II decolonization. This article examines one particular aspect these transformations: once non-Western states were admitted begun participate in community, rules governing interaction between...

10.1163/157180511x552045 article EN Journal of the History of International Law / Revue d’histoire du droit international 2011-01-01

Patrick Macklem’s book is a welcome intervention in current discussions about the contextual and structural dimensions that account for human rights abuses. contributes to this discussion, introducing international legal order as relevant dimension be considered. Macklem does so by arguing law part structures our globalized world entitlements also play role process. Human rights, argues, monitor order’s structuring of world, they mitigate adverse consequences structuring, and, when...

10.3138/utlj.67.8 article EN University of Toronto Law Journal 2017-08-29

A partir de los años 1990 el derecho internacional ha comenzado a reconocer las demandas pueblos originarios. Desde entonces, originarios han adquirido progresivamente carácter sujeto internacional. Para Chile este cambio debería haber sido significativo. Los noventa no solo marcaron fin la Guerra Fría y consiguiente renovada relevancia del internacional; también fueron en que recuperó su democracia. Mientras país, siguiendo avances internacional, comenzó confrontar violaciones derechos...

10.18601/01229893.n39.03 article ES cc-by-nc-sa Revista Derecho del Estado 2017-08-15

Alejandro Alvarez's professional trajectory forces us to rethink the traditional modes of reading and writing history international law. Alvarez was central development modern He also happened be a Latin American lawyer. Should we interpret his work life against background intellectual political Europe? Are contexts that relate crisis European balance power or rise nationalism only ones explain emergence legal discourse? This article situates scholarship within intellectual, economic,...

10.2139/ssrn.1370351 article EN SSRN Electronic Journal 2006-01-01
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