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Recent Publications:
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Group and Individual Rights in the Argument for Puerto Rican Accession
This essay examines the distinction between group rights and individual rights in relation to disputes about Puerto Rico’s status.
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Comment on Blocher & Gulati’s “Puerto Rico and the Right of Accession”
This comment builds upon examples included in Blocher and Gulati’s Article using judicial, congressional, and historical precedents.
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On Constitutional Dismemberment
In Constitutional Amendment and Dismemberment, Richard Albert endorses four main claims: one conceptual, one descriptive, and two normative.
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Rescuing the Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment Doctrine: A Reply to Richard Albert
My major aim here is to rescue the UCA doctrine from Albert’s attack, and to argue that it is a significant tool in a world with his concerns.
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Constitutional Amendment and “Fundamendment”: A Response to Professor Richard Albert
I am delighted to offer some brief observations following Professor Richard Albert’s fascinating study of constitutional amendment and dismemberment.
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Book Review: International Organizations and the Fight for Accountability
Review of International Organizations and the Fight for Accountability: The Remedies and Reparations Gap by Carla Ferstman.
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Book Review: Is International Law International?
Is International Law International? serves as a welcome study of what international law means in some of the world’s major powers.
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Not “Final and Irreversible”: Explaining South Korea’s January 2018 Reversal on the “Comfort Women” Agreement
Approximately two years ago, the Foreign Ministers of South Korea and Japan announced that they had “final[ly] and irreversibl[y]” resolved the issue.
Recent Publications:
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