
The latest issue of the
European Journal of International Law (Vol. 23, no. 3, August 2012) is out. Contents include:
- Editorial
- JHHW,
Impact Factor – The Food is Bad and What’s More There is Not Enough of It; EJIL – the Beginning of an Existential Debate; Masthead Changes; In this Issue
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Articles
- Alan Boyle,
Human Rights and the Environment: Where Next?
- Symposium: Global Public Goods and the Plurality of Legal Orders
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Fabrizio Cafaggi & David D. Caron,
Global Public Goods amidst a Plurality of Legal Orders: A Symposium
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Daniel Bodansky,
What’s in a Concept? Global Public Goods, International Law, and Legitimacy
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Gregory Shaffer,
International Law and Global Public Goods in a Legal Pluralist World
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Fabrizio Cafaggi,
Transnational Private Regulation and the Production of Global Public Goods and Private ‘Bads’
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Francesco Francioni,
Public and Private in the International Protection of Global Cultural Goods
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Petros C. Mavroidis,
Free Lunches? WTO as Public Good, and the WTO’s View of Public Goods
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Elisa Morgera,
Bilateralism at the Service of Community Interests? Non-Judicial Enforcement of Global Public Goods in the Context of Global Environmental Law
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André Nollkaemper,
International Adjudication of Global Public Goods: The Intersection of Substance and Procedure
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Roaming Charges
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Moments of Dignity: Waitresses at Rest at the Toufuya Restaurant by the Isuzu River, Ise, Japan
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EJIL: Debate!
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Vahagn Avedian,
State Identity, Continuity, and Responsibility: The Ottoman Empire, the Republic of Turkey and the Armenian Genocide
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Pulat Tacar & Maxime Gauin,
State Identity, Continuity, and Responsibility: The Ottoman Empire, the Republic of Turkey and the Armenian Genocide: A Reply to Vahagn Avedian
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William E. Conklin,
The Peremptory Norms of the International Community
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Alexander Orakhelashvili,
Peremptory Norms of the International Community: A Reply to William E. Conklin
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William E. Conklin,
The Peremptory Norms of the International Community: A Rejoinder to Alexander Orakhelashvili
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Review Essay
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Andreas Wagner,
Lessons of Imperialism and of the Law of Nations:Alberico Gentili’s Early Modern Appeal to Roman Law