Erpelding, Hess, & Ruiz Fabri: Peace Through Law: The Versailles Peace Treaty and Dispute Settlement After World War I
Michel Erpelding (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law), Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law), & Hélène Ruiz Fabri (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law) have published Peace Through Law: The Versailles Peace Treaty and Dispute Settlement After World War I (Nomos 2019). This is an open-access publication. Contents include:
- Michel Erpelding, Introduction: Versailles and the Broadening of ‘Peace Through Law’
- Nathaniel Berman, Drama Through Law: The Versailles Treaty and the Casting of the Modern International Stage
- Thomas D Grant, The League of Nations as a Universal Organization
- Michael D Callahan, Preventing a Repetition of the Great War: Responding to International Terrorism in the 1930s
- Mamadou Hébié & Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz, The Legacy of the Mandates System of the League of Nations
- León Castellanos-Jankiewicz, Negotiating Equality: Minority Protection in the Versailles Settlement
- Guy Fiti Sinclair, Managing the ‘Workers Threat’: Preventing Revolution Through the International Labour Organization
- Herbert Kronke, The Role of Private International Law: UNIDROIT and the Geneva Conventions on Arbitration
- Jean-Louis Halpérin, Article 231 of the Versailles Treaty and Reparations: The Reparation Commission as a Place for Dispute Settlement?
- Pierre d’Argent, The Conversion of Reparations into Sovereign Debts (1920–1953)
- Christian J Tams, Peace Through International Adjudication: The Permanent Court of International Justice and the Post-War Order
- Marta Requejo Isidro & Burkhard Hess, International Adjudication of Private Rights: The Mixed Arbitral Tribunals in the Peace Treaties of 1919–1922
- Michel Erpelding, Local International Adjudication: The Groundbreaking ‘Experiment’ of the Arbitral Tribunal for Upper Silesia
- Didier Boden, Resistance Through Law: Belgian Judges and the Relations Between Occupied State and Occupying Power
- Jennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, & Kirsten Haydon, The Work of Peace: World War One, Justice and Translation Through Art
Erpelding, Hess, & Ruiz Fabri: Peace Through Law: The Versailles Peace Treaty and Dispute Settlement After World War I
Reviewed by Ladi Michael
on
March 27, 2019
Rating: