
The latest issue of the
Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law (Vol. 3, no. 2, 2014) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
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Amedeo Arena, The Relationship Between Antitrust and Regulation in the US
and the EU: Can Legal Tradition Account for the Differences?
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Marco Benatar, International Law, Domestic Lenses
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John Jupp, Legal Transplants as Tools for Post-Conflict Criminal Law
Reform: Justification and Evaluation
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Vladislava Stoyanova, Article 4 of the ECHR and the Obligation of Criminalising
Slavery, Servitude, Forced Labour and Human Trafficking
- Interpretation in International Law Symposium
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Daniel Peat & Matthew Windsor, An Interpretive Turn to Practice?
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David Baragwanath, The Interpretative Challenges of International Adjudication
Across the Common Law/Civil Law Divide
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Andreas Sennekamp & Isabelle Van Damme, A Practical Perspective on Treaty Interpretation: the Court of
Justice of the European Union and the WTO Dispute
Settlement System
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Shai Dothan, In Defence of Expansive Interpretation in the European Court
of Human Rights
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Jure Vidmar, Judicial Interpretations of Democracy in Human Rights
Treaties
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Diane Desierto & Colin Gillespie, A Modern Integrated Paradigm for International
Responsibility Arising from Violations of Economic, Social,
and Cultural Rights