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New Research Titles Publishing in March

Changing Role of Nationality in International Law

We're pleased to have another bumper month of new research books publishing in March with books covering topics such as Human Rights law; Asian Law and Development Studies amongst other things. Read on for full details of our research and scholarly publishing in March.

Related Products

  1. The United Nations Human Rights Council

    A critique and early assessment

    By Rosa Freedman

    Series: Routledge Research in Human Rights Law

    The United Nations Human Rights Council was created in 2006 to replace the UN Commission on Human Rights. The Council’s mandate and founding principles demonstrate that one of the main aims, at its creation, was for the Council to overcome the Commission’s flaws. Despite the need to avoid repeating...

    Published March 17th 2013 by Routledge

  2. Rethinking Law and Development

    The Chinese experience

    Edited by Guanghua Yu

    This book is the result of the collective effort of some of the foremost experts and scholars of Chinese law, Asian law, and Chinese economics and carefully examines the relationship between law and China’s economic development. Serious inquiries and candid opinions of the contributors have made...

    Published March 6th 2013 by Routledge

  3. Discourses of Environmental Law and the Conceptualisation of Climate Change

    By Jo-Ann Goodie

    The complex phenomenon known as ‘the natural environment’ is a product of a variety of discourses. This book explores the emergence of different discourses of the environment – scientific, economic, political, aesthetic, moral and legal discourses – analyzing the simultaneous separateness and...

    Published March 29th 2013 by Routledge

  4. The Changing Role of Nationality in International Law

    Edited by Serena Forlati, Alessandra Annoni

    Series: Routledge Research in International Law

    The book explores the current role of nationality from the point of view of international law, reassessing the validity of the ‘classical’, state-centered, approach to nationality in light of the ‘new’ role the human being is gradually acquiring within the international legal order. In this...

    Published March 11th 2013 by Routledge