
The latest issue of the
Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 25, no. 3, September 2012) is out. Contents include:
- Editorial
- Jean d'Aspremont, Wording in International Law
- International Legal Theory: Symposium on Foucault
- Tanja Aalberts & Ben Golder, On the Uses of Foucault for International Law
-
Anne Orford,
In Praise of Description
- Matt Craven,
On Foucault and Wolff or from Law to Political Economy
- Stephen Legg,
‘The Life of Individuals as well as of Nations’: International Law and the League of Nations’ Anti-Trafficking Governmentalities
- Susanne Krasmann,
Targeted Killing and Its Law: On a Mutually Constitutive Relationship
- International Law and Practice
- Yejoon Rim,
Two Governments and One Legitimacy: International Responses to the Post-Election Crisis in Côte d'Ivoire
- Belén Olmos Giupponi, International Law and Sources of Law in MERCOSUR: An Analysis of a 20-Year Relationship
- Hague International Tribunals: International Court of Justice
- Beatrice I. Bonafé, Interests of a Legal Nature Justifying Intervention before the ICJ
- Serena Forlati, Reactions to Non-Performance of Treaties in International Law
- International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
- Jens David Ohlin, Second-Order Linking Principles: Combining Vertical and Horizontal Modes of Liability
- Jean Galbraith,
The Good Deeds of International Criminal Defendants
- Guido Acquaviva,
A Conversation with Antonio Cassese