Essay Topic Hub

International Law
Essays

703+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

703 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

International law governs the rules, norms, and principles that regulate relations between sovereign states and other international actors. It appears across law school curricula as well as political science, international relations, and public policy courses. What makes it academically compelling is the tension at its core: a legal system that must coordinate the behavior of independent nations without a single overarching enforcement authority. Topics such as the use of force, diplomatic immunity, human trafficking, and the role of the United Nations give students rich material to examine how law functions — and sometimes fails — at the global level.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some tackle structural and enforcement problems, questioning whether international law can genuinely constrain state behavior when compliance depends on political will. Others take a case-study approach, examining specific controversies such as Israeli settlement policies or diplomatic immunity to test broader legal principles. Several papers engage policy analysis by exploring how governments and international bodies respond to issues like human trafficking or the use of force, while others take a more theoretical stance on whether true universal jurisdiction exists in state practice.

A strong essay on international law needs a focused thesis that goes beyond summarizing rules — it should take a clear position on how law shapes or fails to shape state conduct. Evidence drawn from treaties, United Nations resolutions, and documented state practice carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating international law as monolithic; effective essays acknowledge where significant disagreement among nations exists and engage with that complexity directly.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Ethical debate over torture in interrogation practices
The issue of torture has been the subject of debate for the last years, especially after the Abu Ghraib scandal. Most importantly, the new war on terror waged by the United States and the international community has…
Paper Undergraduate
Solar Energy and Renewable Alternatives in Greece's Crisis
¶ … renewable energy alternatives, including wind power, biomass, and solar power. An analysis of the potential for solar energy applications in Greece is followed by an assessment of the impact of the current economic…
Research Paper Undergraduate
International Law and the Use
RIGHTS, REASON or the SURVIVAL of the FITTEST?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Greece: history, culture, and contemporary society
Greece can be considered to be one of the most important countries in the European Union and of the region. This is largely due to its geostrategic position as well as the resources it has at its disposal in terms of…
Paper Undergraduate
Bosnia Islam the Islamic Faith
The Islamic Faith in Bosnia: A Critically Overlooked Diversity
Paper Undergraduate
Sovereignty: concepts, history, and contemporary applications
Jean Jacques Rousseau can be considered one of the most important thinkers of the political philosophy. He played a crucial role on the way in which the "social contract" as the basis of the society was drafted in theory.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Human Rights in Australia, Bearing
¶ … human rights in Australia, bearing in mind the treaties to which Australia is a State Party.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Zionism Born in the Latter
Zionism born in the latter 19th century, is perhaps one of the most successful yet least understood movements in the last several centuries.
Paper Doctorate
Paradise and Power: Robert Kagan
Author Robert Kagan borrows from the title of a pop culture book -- Women are from Venus, Men are from Mars -- to illustrate the great difference in the 21st Century between Europe and the U.S.
Research Paper Undergraduate
United Nations Could Have Done
The Rwanda genocide, unprecedented in magnitude since the Second World War, happened in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. The deliberate killings of the minority ethnic group Tutsis was unleashed with such viciousness that…