
The latest volume of the
Polish Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 31, 2011) is out. Contents include:
- Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann,
International Economic Law in the 21st Century: Need For
Stronger “Democratic Ownership” and Cosmopolitan Reforms
-
Andreas Zimmermann,
Abiding by and Enforcing International Humanitarian Law
in Asymmetric Warfare: The Case of “Operation Cast Lead”
-
Koen Lenaerts,
The Court of Justice of the European Union and the Protection
of Fundamental Rights
-
Patrick C. R. Terry,
Afghanistan’s Civil War (1979-1989): Illegal and Failed Foreign Interventions
-
Salvatore Fabio Nicolosi,
The Law of Military Occupation and the Role of de Jure and de Facto Sovereignty
-
Serena Forlati,
The Legal Obligation to Prevent Genocide: Bosnia v Serbia and Beyond
-
Michał Jan Filipek & Dzmitry Hruzdou,
Maritime Delimitation in the Barents Sea and International Practice
in Maritime Delimitation
-
Adam Bodnar & Irmina Pacho,
Domestic Investigation into Participation of Polish Officials in the CIA Extraordinary
Rendition Program and the State Responsibility under the European Convention
on Human Rights
-
Karolina Wierczyńska,
Some Remarks on Poland’s Potential Responsibility for the Treatment
of Detainees in a CIA Prison in Poland
-
Aleksandra Mężykowska,
Does the Victim of a Crime Have the Right to a Fair Trial? – Remarks
on the Protection of Crime Victims in the Light of the Guarantees in the European
Convention on Human Rights
- Audrey Patten,
“Empty Human Rights Lip Service”: France’s Roma Expulsions
and the Failure of the European Union to Exercise its Racial Equality Directive
-
Beata Faracik,
The Role of the State in Implementing the UN Guiding Principles on Human
Rights and Business with Special Consideration of Poland