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Publication Cornocopia


I've wanted to be a writer for so long, it's probably concomitantly not surprising that I am finally published and surprising that I'm now a legal writer. My first time to hit print was a foreword I wrote for Volume 14, Issue 1 of the Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law, entitled On the Visibility of Contemporary International Issues, cited as 14 Tul. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 1 (2005). But I was much more proud to have published a larger piece on the legality of the international use of force, The Waning Power of Shared Sovereignty in International Law: The Evolving Effect of U.S. Hegemony, published in Volume 14, Issue 2 of the Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law, cited as 14 Tul. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 579 (2006).

Now, I'm proud to find out that I will be having another article published. The Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution has agreed to publish my article, Language, Morals, and Conceptual Frameworks in Dispute Resolution: Establishing, Employing, and Managing the Logos. This will appear in Volume 8, Issue 1, but the full cite is not yet available, thus for now, will be referenced as 8 Cardozo J. Conflict Resol. (2007) (forthcoming). You can also find abstracts of these works on my website here.

I'm really excited about being to take my academic endeavors and analysis and to be able to share them with a wider legal audience. I've started off with quite a diverse set of papers, and I hope to continue to pursue those thoughts that engage me, rather than focusing on any one topic.


|| posted by mW @ 10:58 AM


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"We should abandon the belief that power makes people mad and that, but the same token, the renunciation of power is one of the conditions of knowledge. We should admit, rather, that power produces knowledge . . . that power and knowledge directly imply one another; that there is no power relation without the correlative constitution of a field of knowledge, nor any knowledge that does not presuppose and constitute at the same time power relations."

          - Michel Foucault