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  • Remembering Peace in a Time of War: Why International Law Matters More Than Ever
  • Manufacturing Peace

Remembering Peace in a Time of War:
Why International Law Matters More Than Ever

Manufacturing Peace

Rashmi Raman and Samuel White challenge traditional conflict-peace notions by highlighting Asian traditions that see peace as dynamic, ethical, and relational to conflict, and offers a nuanced, non-binary approach to peace and conflict.
Asia’s Peace-Conflict Continuum by Rashmi Raman & Samuel White
UNCLOS transformed centuries of ocean conflict into cooperation, offering a global legal framework rooted in equity and peace. Born of decolonization and Cold War compromise, it remains a testament to multilateralism and a cornerstone of oceanic order.
UNCLOS: An Instrument for Peace by Nilüfer Oral
The right to peace is being often interpreted as a proclamation rather than a human right. Elena Pribytkova argues for urgent measures to advance the right to peace as a universal, high-priority, claimable, and enforceable legal entitlement.
The Right to Peace: From Proclamation to Human Right by Elena Pribytkova
Quantum computing poses risks to global digital peace. Urgent international cooperation is needed to create legal norms, adopt quantum-resistant cybersecurity standards, and establish treaties to ensure secure, stable cyberspace.
Seeking Digital Peace and Security in a World of Quantum Uncertainty by Jon Truby
Building Peace
Brokering Peace
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