Items where Author is "Singh, Prabhakar"
Article
Singh, Prabhakar (2021) Spinning yarns from moonbeams: A jurisprudence of statutory interpretation in common law. Statute Law Review, 42 (2). pp. 266-290. ISSN 1464-3863
Singh, Prabhakar (2020) Indian princely states and the 19th-century transformation of the law of nations. Journal of International Dispute Settlement, 11 (3). pp. 365-387. ISSN 20403585
Singh, Prabhakar (2019) Prolegomenon to a Southern jurisprudence. Liverpool Law Review, 40 (3). pp. 155-178. ISSN 0144932X
Singh, Prabhakar (2019) Of international law, semi-colonial Thailand, and imperial ghosts. Asian Journal of International Law, 9 (1). pp. 46-74. ISSN 20442521
Singh, Prabhakar (2018) More norms, less justice: Refugees, the republic, and everyone in between. Liverpool Law Review, 39 (1-2). pp. 123-150. ISSN 0144932X
Singh, Prabhakar (2017) A lawyer's account of the 'Death of Sanskrit' thesis. Economic and Political Weekly, 52 (38). pp. 26-29. ISSN 129976
Singh, Prabhakar (2016) Vernacular nations: Westphalia and the many lives of states in Asia. Economic and Political Weekly, 51 (25). pp. 22-25. ISSN 2349-8846
Singh, Prabhakar (2015) Sino–Indian attitudes to international law: of nations, states and colonial hangovers. The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law, 3 (2). pp. 348-374. ISSN 2050-4802
Singh, Prabhakar (2015) Rough and tumble of international courts and tribunals. Indian Journal of International Law, 55 (3). pp. 329-366. ISSN 0019-5294
Singh, Prabhakar (2012) Macbeth’s three witches: Capitalism, common good, and international law. Oregon Review of International Law, 14 (1). pp. 47-84.
Singh, Prabhakar and Bhattacharya, Shilpi (2011) The changing role of law in Asia: revolution or devolution? Jindal Global Law Review, 2 (2). ISSN 0975-2498
Kanwar, Vik and Singh, Prabhakar (2010) The Globalization of legal knowledge. Jindal Global Law Review, 2 (11). pp. ix-xi. ISSN 23644869
Singh, Prabhakar (2010) Indian international law: From a colonized apologist to a subaltern protagonist. Leiden Journal of International Law, 23 (1). pp. 79-103. ISSN 14789698
Singh, Prabhakar (2010) The scandal of enlightenment and the birth of disciplines: Is international law a science? International Community Law Review, 12 (1). pp. 5-34. ISSN 18719732
Singh, Prabhakar (2010) Colonised's Madness, Colonisers' Modernity and International Law: Mythological Materialism in the East-West Telos. Journal of East Asia and International Law, 3 (1). pp. 67-97. ISSN 19769229
Article in Newspapers and Magazine
Singh, Prabhakar (2022) India at the Hague, from Savarkar to Jadhav. The Indian Express.
Book Section
Singh, Prabhakar (2021) Finding foreign relations law in India: A decolonial dissent. In: Encounters between Foreign Relations Law and International Law. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 1-22. ISBN 9781108942713
Singh, Prabhakar (2020) The private life of transnational law: Reading Jessup from the post-colony. In: The Many Lives of Transnational Law Critical Engagements with Jessup's Bold Proposal. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 419-440. ISBN 9781108780582
Singh, Prabhakar (2019) Reading RP Anand in the Post-Colony: Between resistance and appropriation. In: The Battle for International Law: South-North Perspectives on the Decolonization Era. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 297-318. ISBN 9780198849636
Singh, Prabhakar (2018) Modernity and international law: Mythological materialism in the east-west telos. In: International Law: Contemporary Issues and Future Developments. 1st ed. Routledge, New York, pp. 532-552. ISBN 9780429499715
Book Review
Singh, Prabhakar (2017) Lauren Benton and Lisa Ford. rage for order: the British empire and the origins of internationallLaw, 1800–1850. [Book Review]
Singh, Prabhakar (2017) Book Review of Anne Orford and Florian Hoffmann (eds), with Martin Clark. the Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law. [Book Review]
Singh, Prabhakar (2017) Book Review of the title "The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law by Anne Orford and Florian Hoffmann (eds), with Martin Clark". [Book Review]
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