Sunday, April 17, 2016

New Volume: Czech Yearbook of Public & Private International Law

The latest volume of the Czech Yearbook of Public & Private International Law (Vol. 6, 2015) is out. Contents include:
  • Symposium: The Crime of Aggression Within the Rome Statute Post-Kampala
    • Pavel Šturma & Milan Lipovský, Introduction to section „Symposium on the Crime of Aggression“
    • Veronika Bílková, Aggression – the Supreme International Crime or Not a Crime at All?
    • Alla Tymofeyeva, Crimes against peace in Nuremberg
    • Pavel Šturma, Back to the ILCʹs Legislative History: Code of Crimes against the Peace and Security of Mankind
    • Carollann Braun, The Political Realities and Legal Possibilities Concerning the Relationship between the United Nation Security Council and the Crime of Aggression in the International Criminal Court
    • Pavel Caban, The Definition of the Crime of Aggression – Entry into Force and the Exercise of the Courtʹs Jurisdiction over this Crime
    • Jan Lhotský, Manifest violation of the UN Charter
    • Milan Lipovský, The Understandings to the Rome Statuteʹs Crime of Aggression
    • Kristýna Urbanová, The Kampala Agreement on crime of aggression and responsibility for cyber-attacks
  • Studies in International Law and Organizations
    • Čestmír Čepelka, Jus agens and the question of criterions for its determination
    • Jan Ondřej, Creation of New States and De Facto Regimes and the Case Referring to Crimea
    • Jakub Handrlica, The Vienna Convention on Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage and Nuclear Installations: Application Problems Revisited
    • Martin Faix, Victimsʹ Right to Reparation under International Human Rights Law: also against International Organizations?
  • International Law and European Law
    • Harald Christian Scheu, The limits of so-called benefit tourism and the free movement of EU Citizen
    • Monika Forejtová, Human rights between Strasbourg and Luxembourg – disintegration of monist view of human rights protection or a new beginning?
  • International Human Rights Law and Criminal Law
    • Ralph Janik, You canʹt have one without the other, can you? Assessing the Relationship Between the Use of Force in the Name of Human Rights and Regime Change
    • Pavel Bureš, Reproductive Rights and Human Dignity. Convergence or Divergence in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights?
    • Alla Tymofeyeva, The Highest Amounts of Just Satisfaction: Awards of the European Court of Human Rights to Legal Persons
    • Ondřej Svaček, Human Rights Dimension of the ICCʹs Complementarity Regime
    • Pavel Caban, Gaps in the legal regime of interstate cooperation in prosecuting crimes under international law
  • Czech View on Investment and Trade Law
    • Magdalena Ličková, Post-Lisbon Exercise of EU Competence in the Field of Foreign Investment: Coping with the International Projection of Intra-EU Complexity
    • Ondřej Svoboda, TTIP and ISDS: not irreconcilable acronyms
    • Monika Feigerlová, Diag Human: A case study on multi-jurisdictional enforcement of an international arbitration award
  • Czech Practice of International Law
    • Pavel Šturma, The work of the International Law Commission in 2015, business as usual?
    • Petr Válek, Czech-Austrian Declaration on Jurisdictional Immunities of State-Owned Cultural Property
    • Vít Alexander Schorm, The Czech Republic before the European Court of Human Rights in 2014
    • Milan Beránek, List of Ratified International Treaties which Entered into Force for the Czech Republic from 1st January 2014 till 31st December 2014