
The latest issue of the
European Journal of International Law (Vol. 23, no. 1, February 2012) is out. Contents include:
- Editorial
- JHHW, Integration Through Fear
- Articles
- Armin von Bogdandy & Ingo Venzke, In Whose Name? An Investigation of International Courts’ Public Authority and Its Democratic Justification
- Marlies Glasius, Do International Criminal Courts Require Democratic Legitimacy?
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Nicolás Carrillo-Santarelli & Carlos Espósito, The Protection of Humanitarian Legal Goods by National Judges
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David Koller, … and New York and The Hague and Tokyo and Geneva and Nuremberg and …: The Geographies of International Law
- Critical Review of International Jurisprudence
- Marko Milanovic, Al-Skeini and Al-Jedda in Strasbourg
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Matthew Parish, International Courts and the European Legal Order
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Agnieszka Szpak, National, Ethnic, Racial, and Religious Groups Protected against Genocide in the Jurisprudence of the ad hoc International Criminal Tribunals
- Roaming Charges
- Moments of Dignity: Bicycle Repair Man, Peking
- EJIL: Debate!
- Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: Clarifying a Widespread Misunderstanding
- Eyal Benvenisti, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: A Reply to Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda
- Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: A Rejoinder to Eyal Benvenisti
- The European Tradition in International Law: Nicolas Politis
- Linos-Alexander Sicilianos & Thomas Skouteris, Editorial Note
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Marilena Papadaki, The ‘Government Intellectuals’: Nicolas Politis – An Intellectual Portrait
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Robert Kolb, Politis and Sociological Jurisprudence of Inter-War International Law
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Umut Özsu, Politis and the Limits of Legal Form
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Nicholas Tsagourias, Nicolas Politis’ Initiatives to Outlaw War and Define Aggression, and the Narrative of Progress in International Law
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Maria Gavouneli, Neutrality – A Survivor?