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Dive into the research topics where Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker is active.

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Featured researches published by Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker.


Dartmouth Law Journal | 2016

Legal Recursivity and International Law: Rethinking the Customary Element

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker

The current state of international law is one of deep confusion over the role of state practice and opinio juris within the customary element. The debate between adherents of “modern custom” versus those of “traditional custom” has resulted in deep uncertainty and confusion. New theories of customary international law have proved inadequate in clarifying the current state of the field. Confusions over the meanings and relationships between state practice and opinio juris aside, current approaches are all also flawed due to a heavily state-centric bias that fails to take into account the very real affects that norm-generating transnational actors have on the international system. “Conceptual stretching” is an idea coined by the social scientist Giovanni Sartori to describe the distortions that result when established concepts are introduced to new cases without the required accompanying adaption. This idea is important to the discussion because the current conceptualization of customary international law, relying as it does on the dual attributes of state practice and opinio juris, is “conceptually stretched.” Utilizing Sartori’s “ladder of abstraction,” a new framework for studying customary international norms can be utilized, one which looks to general theories of norm formation instead of focusing on customary international law and its dual attributes of state practice and opinio juris. In pursuing this line of inquiry, the idea of “legal recursivity” is especially promising and can be seen as a more apt description of how, in a new international system dominated by norm-generating transnational actors, international norms develop and operate. First proposed by legal sociologists Terence Halliday and Bruce Carruthers, “legal recursivity” examines how norms can be exchanged and transferred between the transnational governmental, quasi-governmental, and non-governmental institutions within the international community as a whole, and domestic states.


European Journal of International Law | 2010

Customary International Law in the 21st Century: Old Challenges and New Debates

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Brooklyn journal of international law | 2016

Customary International Law: A Reconceptualization

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


San Diego International Law Journal | 2009

Towards a New Transitional Justice Model: Assessing the Serbian Case

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Law and contemporary problems | 2009

Balancing Competing Priorities: Affirmative Action in the United States and Canada

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Journal of Law and Society | 2009

Racial Formation in Quebec: A Legal Retospective

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Archive | 2016

Direct Democracy and European Union Foreign Policy: Lessons from California

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Archive | 2015

Family Visits for Life Long Prisoners: Written Comments in Khoroshenko v Russia

Kanstantsin Dzehtsiarou; Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker; Filippo Fontanelli; Maria Ioannidou; Robert Jago; Theodore Konstadinides; Arman Sarvarian


Archive | 2015

Procedural fairness in international courts and tribunals

Arman Sarvarian; F Fontanelli; A Zidar; Tzevelekos; Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker


Archive | 2015

Procedural Fairness and the Institutional Dynamic: Where We Are and Where We Should Be Going

Roozbeh (Rudy) B. Baker; Arman Sarvarian

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Maria Ioannidou

Queen Mary University of London

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