
The latest issue of the
Melbourne Journal of International Law (Vol. 16, no. 2, December 2015) is out. Contents include:
-
Sean D Murphy,
New Mechanisms for Punishing Atrocities in Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Margaret A Young & Sebastián Rioseco Sullivan, Evolution through the Duty to Cooperate: Implications of the Whaling Case at the International Court of Justice
- Gregory S Gordon,
When ‘One Country, Two Systems’ Meets ‘One Person, One Vote’: The Law of Treaties and the Handover Narrative through the Crucible of Hong Kong’s Election Crisis
- Umair Ghori,
An Epic Mess: ‘Exhaustible Natural Resources’ and the Future of Export Restraints after the China — Rare Earths Decision
- Rachel Harris & Gillian Moon,
GATT Article XX and Human Rights: What Do We Know from the First 20 Years?
- Matias Thomsen,
The Obligation Not to Arbitrarily Refuse International Disaster Relief: A Question of Sovereignty
- Mary Crock & Kate Bones,
Australian Exceptionalism: Temporary Protection and the Rights of Refugees
- Natalie Baird, The Role of International Non-Governmental Organisations in the Universal Periodic Review of Pacific Island States: Can ‘Doing Good’ Be Done Better?