Thursday, February 5, 2009

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 22, no. 1, March 2009) is out. Contents include:
  • Anne-Charlotte Martineau, The Rhetoric of Fragmentation: Fear and Faith in International Law
  • Umut Özsu, De-territorializing and Re-territorializing Lotus: Sovereignty and Systematicity as Dialectical Nation-Building in Early Republican Turkey
  • Emmanuel Voyiakis, International Law and the Objectivity of Value
  • Hague International Tribunals: International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
    • Barbora Holá, Alette Smeulers, & Catrien Bijleveld, Is ICTY Sentencing Predictable? An Empirical Analysis of ICTY Sentencing Practice
  • Hague International Tribunals: International Criminal Court
    • Kenneth A. Rodman, Is Peace in the Interests of Justice? The Case for Broad Prosecutorial Discretion at the International Criminal Court
  • Current Legal Developments
    • Brianne N. McGonigle, Two for the Price of One: Attempts by the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia to Combine Retributive and Restorative Justice Principles
    • John King Gamble & Christine M. Giuliano, US Supreme Court, Medellín v. Texas: More than an Assiduous Building Inspector?