
The latest issue of the
Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law (Vol. 3, no. 4, 2014) is out. Contents include:
- General Part
-
Kate Miles, International Investment Law and Universality: Histories of
Shape-Shifting
-
Tom Gerard Daly,
Baby Steps away from the State: Comparing Postnational
Order in South America and Europe through Analysis of
Regional Judicial Dialogue and Community
-
Maria Papaioannou,
Harmonisation of International Human Rights Law Through
Judicial Dialogue: the Indigenous Rights Paradigm
- Seshauna Wheatle, Constitutional Law and the Ius Gentium
- Elmar Widder,
The Right to Challenge Witnesses—an Application of
Strasbourg‘s Flexible “Sole And Decisive” Rule to Other
Human Rights Jurisdictions
- Symposium: Transitional Constitutionalism
-
Jason Allen,
What is Transitional Constitutionalism and How Should We
Study It?
-
Iain McLean & Scot Peterson,
Transitional Constitutionalism in the United Kingdom
-
Carlos Bernal-Pulido,
Transitional Justice within the Framework of a Permanent
Constitution: The Case Study of the Legal Framework for
Peace in Colombia
-
Sylvie Delacroix,
From constitutional words to Statehood? The Palestinian story
-
Renad Mansour,
Rethinking Recognition: The Case of Iraqi Kurdistan
-
Antonios Kouroutakis, The Provisional Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Somalia: Process, Architecture, and Perspectives
-
Katrín Oddsdottír,
Iceland: The Birth of the World’s First Crowd-sourced
Constitution
- Matthew Kennedy,
Constituent Power and the Limits of Adjudication: Kosovo
and Quebec
-
Francesco Biagi, Will Surviving Constitutionalism in Morocco and Jordan
Work in the Long Run? A Comparison with Three Past
Authoritarian Regimes
-
Lorianne Updike Toler,
Mapping the Constitutional Process
-
Giulio Bartolini,
A Universal Approach to International Law in Domestic
Constitutions: Does it Exist?
-
Anicée van Engeland, Balancing Islamic law, Customary Law and Human Rights in
Islamic Constitutionalism through the Prism of Legal
Pluralism