Book:
Governmental Illegitimacy in International Law (Oxford University
Press, 1999).
Winner, 1999 American Society of International Law Certificate of Merit
(“Best Work in a Specialized Area”)
Co-edited Collection:
Gregory H. Fox & Brad R. Roth, eds., Democratic Governance and
International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2000) (collection of new and
previously published work from leading writers in international law and
international relations, including new and previously published work by the
editors and an editors' introduction).
Major Journal Articles and Book Chapters:
“Retrieving Marx for the Human Rights Project,” Leiden Journal of
International Law, forthcoming (2003).
“Anti-Sovereigntism, Liberal Messianism, and Excesses in the Drive against
Impunity,” Finnish Yearbook of International Law 12:17-45 (listed as
2001, publication 2003).
“Bending the Law, Breaking It, or Developing It? The United States and
the ‘Humanitarian’ Use of Force in the Post-Cold War Era,” in Michael Byers
& Georg Nolte, eds., United States Hegemony and the Foundations of the
International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 232-63.
“The CEDAW as a Collective Approach to Women’s Rights,” Michigan Journal of
International Law 24:187-225 (2003).
“Understanding the ‘Understanding’: Federalism Constraints on Human
Rights Implementation,” Wayne Law Review 47:891-907 (2002).
(with Gregory H. Fox) “Democracy and International Law,” Review of
International Studies 27:327-352 (2001).
(with Gregory H. Fox) “Introduction: The Spread of Liberal Democracy and Its
Implications for International Law,” in Gregory H. Fox and Brad R. Roth, eds., Democratic
Governance and International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp.
1-22.
“The Illegality of ‘Pro-Democratic Invasion Pacts,” in Gregory H. Fox and Brad
R. Roth, eds., Democratic Governance and International Law (Cambridge
University Press, 2000), pp. 328-42.
“What Ever Happened to Sovereignty? Reflections on International Law
Methodology,” in Charlotte Ku & Thomas G. Weiss, eds., Understanding
Global Governance (Academic Council on the United Nations System, 1998),
pp. 69-100.
“Evaluating Democratic Progress: A Normative Theoretical Perspective,” Ethics
& International Affairs, 9:55-77 (1995), reprinted in Gregory H.
Fox & Brad R. Roth, eds., Democratic Governance and International Law,
(Cambridge University Press, 2000).
“Governmental Illegitimacy Revisited: ‘Pro-Democratic’ Armed Intervention
in the Post-Bipolar World,” Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems,
3:481-513 (1993).
“Constitutionalism in Eastern Europe: Alternatives to the Liberal Social
Contract,” Dickinson Journal of International Law, 11:283-324
(1993).
“The First Amendment in the Foreign Affairs Realm: ‘Domesticating’ the
Restrictions on Citizen Participation,” Temple Political & Civil Rights
Law Review, 2:255-91 (1993).
Journal Commentaries:
“Peaceful Transition and Retrospective Justice: Some Reservations. A
Response to Juan Mendez,” Ethics & International Affairs 15:45-50
(2001).
“Governmental Illegitimacy and Neo-Colonialism: Response to Review by
James Thuo Gathii,” Michigan Law Review 98:2056-65 (2000).
“Democratic Intolerance: Observations on Fox and Nolte,” Harvard
International Law Journal, 37:235-38 (1996) , reprinted in Gregory H. Fox
& Brad R. Roth, eds., Democratic Governance and International Law,
(Cambridge University Press, 2000).
Forthcoming Book Chapters:
“What’s Left? Socialist Political Thought After the Fall,” in Thomas
Newlin & Sibelan Forrester, eds., Literature, History and Politics: In
Honor of Thompson Bradley, forthcoming (Slavica Press, 2004).
“Coercion and the Quest for Substantive Freedom,” in Mary Garrett, Heidi
Gottfried, & Sandra VanBurkleo, eds, Remapping the Humanities; Identity,
Memory, Community, and (post)Modernity, forthcoming (Wayne State University
Press, 2004).
“The ‘Emerging Right to Democratic Governance’ and the Inter-American System,”
to be translated into Spanish and published in a collection sponsored by the
Asociacion por la Unidad de Nuestra America, forthcoming 2004.
Published Conference Proceedings:
Symposium Participant in “Dueling Fates: Should the International Legal Regime
Accept a Collective or an Individual Paradigm to Protect Women's Rights?”
(April 2002), Michigan Journal of International Law 24:347, 439-48,
455-56, 459-60 (2003).
“Terrorism and the Inherent Right to Self-Defense” (January 2002 Symposium,
“War on Terrorism: Legality of the American Response at Home and
Abroad”), MSU-DCL Journal of International Law 10:542-51 (2002).
“‘Peoples’ as Political Communities,” Proceedings of the American Society of
International Law, 93:55-56 (1999).
“Popular Sovereignty: The Elusive Norm,” Proceedings of the American
Society of International Law, 91:363-70 (1997).
Book Reviews:
American Political Science Review 95:1029-30 (2001), review of Anthony
Clark Arend, Legal Rules and International Society (Oxford University
Press, 1999).
International Affairs 77:411-12 (2001), review of Susan Marks, The
Riddle of All Constitutions (Oxford University Press, 2000).