Talk:Public International Law/Interaction/Interaction within International Law

Dear Adamantia Rachovitsa,

this looks very interesting and I am very much looking forward to reading more about it! I really like the titles of your sections and subsections and I believe the order and categorisation that you propose is very well researched and reasonable. I was wondering, whether you will also look into "cross-fertilization", how some have called it, or a possible refinement in the course of the chapter? I guess it could be addressed in the sub-section on interpretation? or dialogue? Again, I just wondered...

I am very much looking forward to seeing how you continue to work on this!

Best Anne

Review 2 November 2021
Dear Mando,

I agree with Anne that the outline looks very promising. Here are some suggestions for works written by FLINT scholars and/or scholars working from Global South perspectives that may be particularly relevant to your chapter: Anne Charlotte Martineau, The Rhetoric of Fragmentation; Tamar Megiddo, Beyond Fragmentation; Liliana Popa, Patterns of Treaty-Interpretation as Anti-Fragmentation Tools; Musa Njabulo Shongwe, The Fragmentation of International Law; Our own Silvia Steininger, What's Human Rights got to do with it?. Luis Eslava and Sundhya Pahuja also include some observations on fragmentation in their article on the Everyday Life of International Law. You may also find my own PhD dissertation useful, which is available here. I am really looking forward to reading future versions of this chapter! Sué Sué González Hauck (discuss • contribs) 08:57, 2 November 2021 (UTC)


 * Thanks, Sue and Anne for the comments and the references! Yes, let's see how this unfolds. Re Anne on "cross-fertilization": I am not quite sure whether and, if yes, to what extent I will discuss it - it depends on the word limitation.. Mando Rachovitsa (discuss • contribs) 15:55, 3 November 2021 (UTC)