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Author Page - ANNE MARIE SLAUGHTER

Recent Foreign Affairs articles:

3 documents found; displaying 1 to 3.

A Duty to Prevent
Lee Feinstein and Anne-Marie Slaughter
January/February 2004
Summary: The unprecedented threat posed by terrorists and rogue states armed with weapons of mass destruction cannot be handled by an outdated and poorly enforced nonproliferation regime. The international community has a duty to prevent security disasters as well as humanitarian ones -- even at the price of violating sovereignty.
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Plaintiff's Diplomacy
Anne-Marie Slaughter and David Bosco
September/October 2000
Summary: The ever more litigious nature of American society is starting to affect an unexpected area: foreign policy. Increasing numbers of individuals, both American and foreign, are now using U.S. courts to defend their rights under international law in ways impossible just a few years ago. The plaintiffs range from Holocaust survivors to terrorist victims to the inhabitants of tropical rain forests; the defendants include multinational corporations, foreign officials, and even governments. On the one hand, the trend is bringing to justice many long thought unaccountable. On the other, it is making the tricky process of American diplomacy harder than ever.
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The Real New World Order
Anne-Marie Slaughter
September/ October 1997
Summary: The state is not disappearing; it is unbundling into its separate, functionally distinct parts. These courts, regulatory agencies, executives, and legislatures are then networking with their counterparts abroad, creating a new, transgovernmental order. While lacking the drama of high politics, transnational government networks are a reality for the internationalists of the 1990s -- bankers, lawyers, activists, and criminals. And they may hold the answer to many of the most pressing international challenges of the 21st century.
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Recent books reviewed in Foreign Affairs:

One document found. displaying 1 to 1.

A New World Order.

Anne-Marie Slaughter.

Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004.

May/June 2004

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1 | 2 

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