- From AJIL's forthcoming October 2013 issue
- Anupam Chander, Unshackling Foreign Corporations: Kiobel's Unexpected Legacy
- Julian G. Ku, Kiobel and the Surprising Death of Universal Jurisdiction Under the Alien Tort Statute
- Ralph G. Steinhardt, Kiobel and the Weakening of Precedent: A Long Walk for a Short Drink
- Robert McCorquodale, Waving Not Drowning: Kiobel Outside the United States
- Caroline Kaeb & David Scheffer, The Paradox of Kiobel in Europe
- Vivian Grosswald Curran & David Sloss, Reviving Human Rights Litigation After Kiobel
- From AJIL UNBOUND (web exclusive)
- Zachary D. Clopton, Kiobel and the Law of Nations
- Geoffrey R. Watson, "Or a Treaty of the United States": Treaties and the Alien Tort Statute After Kiobel
- David H. Moore, Kiobel and the New Battle Over Congressional Intent
- Marco Basile, The Long View on Kiobel: A Muted Victory for International Legal Norms in the United States?
- Austen L. Parrish, Kiobel's Broader Significance: Implications for International Legal Theory
- Andrew Sanger, Corporations and Transnational Litigation: Comparing Kiobel with the Jurisprudence of English Courts
- Mahdev Mohan, The Road to Song Mao: Transnational Litigation from Southeast Asia to the United Kingdom
- Nicola Jägers, Katinka Jesse, & Jonathan Verschuuren, The Future of Corporate Liability for Extraterritorial Human Rights Abuses: The Dutch Case Against Shell
- Anne Herzberg, Kiobel and Corporate Complicity—Running with the Pack
- Justine Nolan, Michael Posner, & Sarah Labowitzf, Beyond Kiobel: Alternative Remedies for Sustainable Human Rights Protection
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Agora: Reflections on Kiobel
The American Journal of International Law has posted the papers from its forthcoming Agora: Reflections on Kiobel. They include: