Doreen Lustig is an Associate Professor at Tel Aviv University Law Faculty.
"Lustig's work is a ""must read"" for anyone interested in this history and in the history of international law more generally. * Peter Muchlinski, SOAS, University of London, Law and History Review * Doreen Lustig offers an original, engaging, and historically grounded insightinto the development of international law's approach to private corporations. * Peter Muchlinski, University of London * Lustig's book is the leading history of the relationship between international law and the modern corporation in the twentieth century. It is a brilliant work of scholarship that has made a silence speak volumes. * Christopher A. Casey, Syracuse University, The Law & Practice of International Courts and Tribunals * ... Lustig has produced a compelling, and well-documented, narrative. Scholars of international law as well as legal historians and legal theorists will find much to their interest in this monograph, which deserves to be read widely. * Filip Batselé, PhD candidate, Institute for Legal History & Rolin-Jaequemyns International Law Institute, Ghent, Leiden Journal of International Law * Lustig's work is an excellent piece of scholarship providing much information regarding the direct paradigms that shape multinational corporations in international law and is a useful reference tool for those who are working on the history of international economic law. * P. Sean Morris, Research Scholar, Faculty of Law, University of Helsinki, The Asian Journal of International Law * Lustig's volume is slim, very slim for a historical study—what an achievement, what a virtue. It is written engagingly, not quite in the conversational style of Clapham, but with utmost clarity and, above all, a story, a real story unfolds from chapter to chapter. It has wonderful momentum. And, importantly, it is not only the historical narrative that is of true interest, but it is abundantly relevant to any contemporary discourse of corporations and international law. * J. H. H. Weiler, New York University School of Law, ICONnect *"