Saturday, August 27, 2016

New Issue: New York University Journal of International Law and Politics

The latest issue of the New York University Journal of International Law and Politics (Vol. 48, no. 4, Summer 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Symposium: Constitution and Custom: Women’s Rights and Access to Justice in Pluralist Societies
    • Rangita de Silva de Alwis & Indira Jaising, The Role of Personal Laws in Creating a “Second Sex”
    • Esmeralda Lopez & Melissa Hastings, Overlooked and Unprotected: Central American Indigenous Migrant Women in Mexico
    • Rachel Sieder, Legal Pluralism and Indigenous Women’s Rights in Mexico: The Ambiguities of Recognition
  • Symposium: Women Confronting ISIS: Local Strategies and States’ Responsibilities
    • Charlotte Bunch, Listing to the Women: Human Rights in Conflict Situations – Opening Remarks
    • Lisa Davis, ISIL, the Syrian Conflict, Sexual Violence, and the Way Forward: Syrian Women’s Inclusion in the Peace Processes
    • Jessica Stern, The U.N. Security Council’s Arria-Formula Meeting on Vulnerable Groups in Conflict: ISIL’s Targeting of LGMTI Individuals
    • Yifat Susskind & Yunar Mohammed, Why True Legal Victories for Human Rights Depend on Grassroots Activists
    • Madeleine Ross & Christine Chinkin, Exposing the Gendered Myth of Post-Conflict Transition: The Transformative Power of Economic and Social Rights

Friday, August 26, 2016

New Volume: German Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the German Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 58, 2015) is out. Contents include:
  • Forum: The Conflict in Ukraine and the ›Weakness‹ of International Law
    • Christian Marxsen, International Law in Crisis: Russia's Struggle for Recognition
  • Focus: Cyber-Security Beyond the Military Perspective
    • Martin Ney & Andreas Zimmermann, Cyber-Security Beyond the Military Perspective: International Law, ›Cyberspace‹, and the Concept of Due Diligence
    • Christian Walter, Obligations of States Before, During, and After a Cyber Security Incident
    • Oliver Dörr, Obligations of the State of Origin of a Cyber Security Incident
    • August Reinisch & Markus Beham, Mitigating Risks: Inter-State Due Diligence Obligations in Case of Harmful Cyber Incidents and Malicious Cyber Activity – Obligations of the Transit State
    • Robert Kolb, Reflections on Due Diligence Duties and Cyberspace
    • Jutta Brunnée & Tamar Meshel, Teaching an Old Law New Tricks: International Environmental Law Lessons for Cyberspace Governance
    • Matthias Herdegen, Possible Legal Framework and Regulatory Models for Cyberspace: Due Diligence Obligations and Institutional Models for Enhanced Inter-State Cooperation
  • General Articles
    • Eckart Klein & David Kretzmer, The UN Human Rights Committee: The General Comments – The Evolution of an Autonomous Monitoring Instrument
    • Alex G. Oude Elferink, International Law and Negotiated and Adjudicated Maritime Boundaries: A Complex Relationship
    • Harald Kleinschmidt, Decolonisation, State Succession, and a Formal Problem of International Public Law
    • Marco Longobardo, The Palestinian Right to Exploit the Dead Sea Coastline for Tourism
    • Fenghua Li, Safeguarding State Sovereignty: The Relevance of Post-Award Remedies in ICSID and Non-ICSID Arbitration
    • Laura Salvadego, Witness Protection and Inter-State Cooperation: Current and Emerging Challenges in the Fight Against Transnational Organised Crime
  • German Practice
    • Elisa Oezbek, Strengthening the Human Rights Council: The 2015 Presidency of German Ambassador Joachim Rücker
    • Hendrik Selle, Confronting the Destruction of Cultural Heritage Used as a Tactic of War: A German-Iraqi Initiative in the UN General Assembly
    • Stephanie Schlickewei, The Deployment of the German Armed Forces to the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA)
    • Henning Büttner & Marvin Schwope, The Aftermath of Prism: The International Legal Framework for Surveillance and the Radius of Operation for German Intelligence Agencies from a Human Rights Perspective
    • Sarah Bothe & Charlotte Gaschke, Germany's Proposal of a »Grexit auf Zeit«
    • Jens T. Theilen, Towards Acceptance of Religious Pluralism: The Federal Constitutional Court's Second Judgment on Muslim Teachers Wearing Headscarves

New Issue: Journal du Droit International

The latest issue of the Journal du Droit International ("Clunet") (Vol. 143, no. 3, Juillet-Août-Septembre 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Doctrine
    • Gilles Cuniberti, La Lex Mercatoria au XXIe siècle, Une analyse empirique et économique
    • Christelle Chalas, Contrats de mariage et nuptial agreements : vers une acculturation réciproque ? Regards croisés entre la France et l’Angleterre (étude de droit comparé, de droit international privé et de droit interne)
    • Louis Savadogo, Déni de justice et responsabilité internationale de l’État pour les actes de ses juridictions
  • Variétés
    • Pierre Gannagé, Allocution de remerciement, Quelques propos sur la coexistence juridique des cultures

New Issue: Revue Générale de Droit International Public

The latest issue of the Revue Générale de Droit International Public (Vol. 120, no. 2, 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Maurice Kamto, La nature juridique du compromis en tant qu'acte de saisine d'une instance juridictionnelle internationale: contribution à l'étude de l'acte juridique international
    • Thibaut Fleury Graff, Accords de libre-échange et territoires occupés: a propos de l'arrêt TPIUE, 10 décembre 2015, Front Polisario c. Conseil
    • Florian Couveinhes Matsumoto, L'accord commercial entre l'UE et ses Etats membres d'une part, et le Pérou et la Colombie d'autre part : un révélateur de deux maladies du droit international actuel
  • Note
    • Nabil Hajjami, La sentence arbitrale du 18 mars 2015: Maurice c. Royaume-Uni de Grande-Bretagne et d'Irlande du Nord

New Issue: American Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the American Journal of International Law (Vol. 110, no. 2, April 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Symposium on the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
    • Michael J. Matheson & Natalie L. Reid, Editors' Introduction
    • Michael J. Matheson & David Scheffer, The Creation of the Tribunals
    • Darryl Robinson & Gillian MacNeil, The Tribunals and the Renaissance of International Criminal Law: Three Themes
    • Sara Kendall & Sarah M. H. Nouwen, Speaking of Legacy: Toward an Ethos of Modesty at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
    • Marko Milanović, The Impact of the ICTY on the Former Yugoslavia: An Anticipatory Postmortem
  • In Memoriam
    • Donald McRae, John H. Jackson (1932–2015)
  • Notes and Comments
    • Congyan Cai, International Law in Chinese Courts During the Rise of China
    • Daniel Bodansky, The Paris Climate Change Agreement: A New Hope?
  • International Decisions
    • Jacob Katz Cogan, Certain Activities Carried Out by Nicaragua in the Border Area (Costa Rica v. Nicaragua); Construction of a Road in Costa Rica Along the San Juan River (Nicaragua v. Costa Rica)
    • Björn Arp, Charanne B.V. v. Spain
    • James Thuo Gathii, National Commissioner of the South African Police Service v. Southern African Human Rights Litigation Centre
    • Klaus Ferdinand Gärditz, “Treaty Override”
  • Contemporary Practice of the United States Relating to International Law
    • Kristina Daugirdas & Julian Davis Mortenson, Contemporary Practice of the United States Relating to International Law
  • Recent Books on International Law
    • K.J. Keith, reviewing The Oxford Handbook of the Law of the Sea, edited by Donald R. Rothwell, Alex G. Oude Elferink, Karen N. Scott, and Tim Stephens
    • Dinah Shelton, reviewing Peremptory International Law—Jus Cogens: A General Inventory, by Robert Kolb; and Jus Cogens: International Law and Social Contract, by Thomas Weatherall
    • William E. Butler, reviewing Russian Approaches to International Law, by Lauri Mälksoo
    • Christina M. Cerna, reviewing Religious Actors and International Law, by Ioana Cismas
    • Sergio Puig, reviewing Sugar and the Making of International Trade Law, by Michael Fakhri

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Call for Submissions: Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law

The Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law has issued a call for submissions on the theme "Armed Groups" for its forthcoming volume 19 (2016). Here's the call:

Call for Papers - Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Vol. 19 (2016)

General theme: Armed Groups

Most of today’s armed conflicts are fought between armed groups and State forces. The term armed groups covers a huge variety of different organisations: militias, warlord factions and highly organised (terrorist) groups, such as the organisation that calls itself Islamic State. Their role challenges the traditionally state-oriented character of international law: are the rules on the use of force still adequate for dealing with the threat of violent non-state actors? Do we need a definition or criteria for determining what constitutes an armed group? How can compliance of such groups with international humanitarian law be improved? How can responsibilities of such groups, in times of conflict, be established under general public international law?

The general theme of Vol. 19 of the Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law (YIHL) will therefore look at these and other challenges arising from the participation of armed groups in contemporary armed conflicts.

In addition to this general theme, there is of course also the possibility to submit articles on international humanitarian law topics not related to this general theme.

Interested authors should send their submission, related to the above general theme, or to another international humanitarian law topic of relevance in today’s world, before 1 October 2016, to the Managing Editor of the YIHL, Dr. Christophe Paulussen (c.paulussen@asser.nl). Articles should be submitted in conformity with the YIHL guidelines. The Editorial Board aims to publish Vol. 19 (2016) at the end of the ensuing year, in December 2017 at the latest.

Conference: Liability, Immunity, and the Benefits of War: New Perspectives on the Moral Status of Civilians

On September 1-2, 2016, the European University Institute will host the Seventh Annual Conference of the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict. The theme is: "Liability, Immunity, and the Benefits of War: New Perspectives on the Moral Status of Civilians." The program is here. Here's the idea:

A key task for revisionist just war theory has been to investigate the conditions under which individual agents can come to lose their rights against non-consensual harm. By and large, Just War Theorists recognize forfeiture arising from moral or causal responsibility for a wrongful threat as the central mechanism by which one can lose rights. Recently, however, a number of theorists have suggested that rights against harm can be lost or weakened in other ways besides forfeiture. One proposal is that agents can come to lack rights against harm in virtue of their involuntarily incurred enforceable duties. Another is that agents can have their rights against harm weakened when these rights make other non-liable agents worse off. A third attempt notes that if one is an expected beneficiary of a harmful preventive action, one might have weakened rights against collateral harm compared to other uninvolved agents. Relatedly, another proposal suggests that agents who fail to disgorge benefits derived from injustice can come to lose rights against preventive harm.

These proposals attempt to provide new justifications for inflicting non-consensual harm beyond the familiar conceptions of forfeiture and lesser evil. Further, they challenge the orthodox view that causal contribution to a wrongful threat is necessary for the loss or weakening of an agent’s rights against harm. As such, they all have potentially radical implications for the rights of bystanders (and, by extension, civilians’ moral immunity to intentional harming in war). A central aim of the conference, then, will be to assess whether and to what extent individuals can lose rights against harm through circumstances entirely beyond their control.

We will also explore the related question of whether these ways of weakening or losing one’s rights are restricted to rights against certain types of harm. For example, we might think that these justifications cannot weaken our rights against the infliction of direct physical harm, but can nevertheless weaken our rights against other sorts of harm, such as harms imposed by cyber attacks, boycotts and sanctions, and invasions of privacy through surveillance. This work thus has implications for the range of permissible means of fighting wars.

Call for Papers: Regional Human Rights Systems in Crisis

The Wisconsin International Law Journal has issued a call for papers for a symposium on "Regional Human Rights Systems in Crisis." Here's the call:

Call for Papers

Regional Human Rights Systems in Crisis

Wisconsin International Law Journal Annual Symposium

March 31, 2017, University of Wisconsin Law School

Regional human rights systems have been heralded as one of the greatest innovations of the project of global governance. However, there are a host of urgent issues — of growing importance to social justice and human well-being — that pose fundamental challenges to the more developed regional systems, even as they make it harder for newer regional systems to develop. It is unclear, for example, how well these systems grapple with questions of economic inequality, climate change, migration crises and organized non-state violence. They are challenged as well by Brexit, the turn toward nationalistic ideologies, and other criticisms of globalization. In this Symposium, we explore how and whether regional human rights systems can constructively engage in these challenging times. We include not just the developed systems of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, but also the new and less judicialized systems of Asia and the Middle East. Taken together, the conference allows us to ask anew the question of what are human rights, and where do human rights inscribed at the regional level take us in the contemporary era.

Some themes that may be addressed include:

  • Political stand-offs in the more well-developed systems: Brexit, the European Union and the Council of Europe System, the Inter-American Commission in crisis; the African Union versus the International Criminal Court
  • The challenges of constructing regional human rights in Asia and the Middle East
  • The pros and cons of the state liability model in facing issues of migration; terrorism; corporate liability; transboundary harm, internet privacy, international crimes
  • Human Rights versus Buen Vivir, Occupy, religions, and other discourses concerned with social, political, and legal justice
  • Universal (UN-based) versus regional human rights protection

Submissions & Guidelines

WILJ invites submission of abstracts of not more than 500 words from legal scholars and practitioners in the fields of regional human rights and international law. The submission deadline is September 15, 2016, and applicants will be notified by October 10, 2016. Upon selection, the complete articles (an approximate minimum of 10,000 words) shall be submitted by January 15, 2017, for final review. Authors of articles selected at the final review stage will be invited to present at the 2017 WILJ Annual Symposium on March, 31, 2017, at the University of Wisconsin Law School, and their articles will be published in our 2017 Symposium issue. By presenting at the Symposium, speakers commit to publishing their articles with WILJ, and the final drafts shall be submitted by April 30, 2017. Travel (economy class) and accommodation will be covered for accepted applicants. Submission is restricted to papers that have not yet been published.

Please submit your abstract and your CV by the deadline to: symposium.wilj@gmail.com

For inquiries, please e-mail Emmeline Lee at: symposium.wilj@gmail.com

Publication Timeline

September 15, 2016 — Abstract submission deadline
October 10, 2016 — Chosen applicants notified
January 15, 2017 — Completed (but not final) article submission deadline
March 31, 2017 — WILJ Symposium
April 30, 2017 — FINAL article submission deadline

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

2016 Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures

On October 25-27, 2016, Christine Chinkin (London School of Economics - Law) will deliver the 2016 Sir Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures at the University of Cambridge. The topic of the lectures is: "International Law and Women, Peace and Security."

McCorquodale & Gauci: British Influences on International Law, 1915-2015

Robert McCorquodale (British Institute of International and Comparative Law) & Jean-Pierre Gauci (British Institute of International and Comparative Law) have published British Influences on International Law, 1915-2015 (Brill | Nijhoff 2016). Contents include:
  • Robert McCorquodale & Jean-Pierre Gauci, From Grotius to Higgins: British Influences on International Law from 1915–2015
  • Antonios Tzanakapoulos, The Influence of English Courts on the Development of International Law
  • Kate Jones, Marking Foreign Policy by Justice: The Legal Advisers to the Foreign Office, 1876–1953
  • Philip Allott, Britain and Europe: Managing Revolution
  • Stephen Samuel, British Influences on the Ideals of International Lawyers
  • Kasey McCall-Smith, British influence on the law of treaties
  • Martin Clark, British Contributions to the concept of recognition during the inter-war period: Williams, Baty and Lauterpacht
  • Philippa Webb, British Contribution to the Law of State Immunity
  • David H. Anderson, British Influence on the Law of the Sea 1915–2015
  • Mario Prost & Yoriko Otomo, British influences on international environmental law: the case of wildlife conservation
  • Merris Amos, The Influence of British Courts on the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
  • Nigel S. Rodley, The Contribution of British NGOs to the Development of International Law
  • Amina Higgins & Noelle Adanan, Britain’s Influence on the Regulation of the Slave Trade in the Twentieth Century
  • Nicholas Tsagourias, Contribution of British International Lawyers to the Law on the Use of Force
  • Matthew Garrod, The British Influence on the development of the laws of war and the punishment of war criminals: from the Grotius Society to the United Nations War Crimes Commission
  • Shavana Musa, The British and the Nuremburg Trials
  • James Upcher, Neutral and Beligerent Rights: the development of a British Position?
  • Anne Marie Brennan, Historical Reflections on the Criminalisation of Terrorism under International Law from the League of Nations to R v. Mohammed Gul: How Britain has Swollen the Tide of Obscurity
  • Richard Collins, The Progressive Conception of International Law: Brierly and Lauterpacht in the Interbellum Period
  • Robert Cryer, International Law and the Illusion of Novelty: Georg Schwarzenberger
  • Gerry Simpson, Juridical Intervention: Martin Wight as International Lawyer
  • Philippe Sands & Arman Sarvarian, The Contribution of the UK Bar to International Courts

New Issue: Transnational Dispute Management

The latest issue of Transnational Dispute Management (2016, no. 3) is out. This is a special issue on "Three Centuries of Arbitration for Peace." The table of contents is here.

Joyner: Iran's Nuclear Program and International Law: From Confrontation to Accord

Daniel H. Joyner (Univ. of Alabama - Law) has published Iran's Nuclear Program and International Law: From Confrontation to Accord (Oxford Univ. Press 2016). Here's the abstract:
This book provides an international legal analysis of the most important questions regarding Iran's nuclear program since 2002. Setting these legal questions in their historical and diplomatic context, this book aims to clarify how the relevant sources of international law - including primarily the 1968 Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty and IAEA treaty law - should be properly applied in the context of the Iran case. It provides an instructional case study of the application of these sources of international law, the lessons which can be applied to inform both the on-going legal and diplomatic dynamics surrounding the Iran nuclear dispute itself, as well as similar future cases. Some questions raised regard the watershed diplomatic accord reached between Iran and Western states in July, 2015, known as the Joint Comprehensive Program of Action. The answers will be of interests to diplomats and academics, as well as to anyone who is interested in understanding international law's application to this sensitive dispute in international relations.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

New Issue: Global Environmental Politics

The latest issue of Global Environmental Politics (Vol. 16, no. 3, August 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Section: The Paris Agreement on Climate Change
    • Radoslav S. Dimitrov, The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Behind Closed Doors
    • Thomas Hale, “All Hands on Deck”: The Paris Agreement and Nonstate Climate Action
    • Shannon K. Orr, Institutional Control and Climate Change Activism at COP 21 in Paris
    • Noelle E. Selin, Teaching and Learning from Environmental Summits: COP 21 and Beyond
  • Research Articles
    • Sikina Jinnah & Abby Lindsay, Diffusion Through Issue Linkage: Environmental Norms in US Trade Agreements
    • Robert Gampfer, Minilateralism or the UNFCCC? The Political Feasibility of Climate Clubs
    • Kirsten Rodine-Hardy, Nanotechnology and Global Environmental Politics: Transatlantic Divergence
    • Alexander Ovodenko, Governing Oligopolies: Global Regimes and Market Structure
    • Stavros Afionis, Lindsay C. Stringer, Nicola Favretto, Julia Tomei, & Marcos S. Buckeridge, Unpacking Brazil’s Leadership in the Global Biofuels Arena: Brazilian Ethanol Diplomacy in Africa
  • Book Review Essay
    • Dustin Evan Garrick, The Hydropolitics of the Nile Revisited: Elites, Experts, and Everyday Practices in Egypt and Sudan

New Issue: Criminal Law Forum

The latest issue of Criminal Law Forum (Vol. 27, no. 3, September 2016) is out. Contents include:
  • Abdus Samad, The International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh and International Law
  • Bugalo Maripe, Contempt of Court in Facie Curiae; Problems of Justification, Application and Control with Reference to the Situation in Botswana
  • Amissi Manirabona & Eduardo Saad Diniz, Towards Efficiency in Attributing Criminal Liability to Corporations: Canadian and Brazilian Regimes Compared
  • Leanid Kazyrytski, Latvian SS-Legion: Past and Present. Some Issues Regarding the Modern Glorification of Nazism

Tourme Jouannet, Muir Watt, de Frouville, & Matringe: Droit international et reconnaissance

Emmanuelle Tourme Jouannet (Science Po Paris - Law), Horatia Muir Watt (Science Po Paris - Law), Olivier de Frouville (Université Paris II Panthéon Assas - Law), & Jean Matringe (Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne - Law) have published Droit international et reconnaissance (Pedone 2016). Contents include:
  • Emmanuelle Tourme Jouannet, Le droit international de la reconnaissance
  • Jean d’Aspremont, De la reconnaissance à l’anthropomorphisme en droit international
  • Robert Howse, “Kojevian” Recognition and Contemporary International Law
  • Charalambos Apostolidis, Le droit international de la reconnaissance comme champ de recherche. Réflexions autour de l’ouvrage d’Emmanuelle Tourme Jouannet « Qu’est-ce qu’une société internationale juste ? »
  • Olivier de Frouville, La lutte pour la reconnaissance : une nouvelle théorie explicative de l’évolution du droit international ? A propos de « Pour une société internationale juste. Entre droit du développement et reconnaissance », d’Emmanuelle Tourme Jouannet
  • Albane Geslin, De l’entre-soi à l’entre-autre(s). Enjeux et ambiguités de la reconnaissance internationale des droits des peuples autochtones
  • Carlos-Miguel Herrera, La reconnaissance par les droits (en partant des droits sociaux)
  • Emmanuel Decaux, La reconnaissance des droits culturels
  • Livia Kummer, Legal Recognition of Historic Crimes in the Present Day: Case Study of the Katyń Massacre
  • Jose Manuel Coelho, Réflexion(s) sur les crimes de l’histoire et le droit international de la reconnaissance
  • Cécile de Caunes & Juan Branco, Les reconnaissances juridiques des afro-descendants
  • Noura Kridis, Droit de la reconnaissance dans le cadre des révoltes arabes
  • Horatia Muir Watt, La reconnaissance entre philosophie politique et droit international privé : un rendez-vous manqué ?
  • Paul Lagarde, Introduction au thème de la reconnaissance des situations : rappel des points les plus discutés
  • Ivana Isailovic, La reconnaissance politique en droit transnational : les identités, les marginalisations et le droit international privé
  • Dominique Gaurier, La vision de l’autre, étranger ou non européen à travers le regard des auteurs classiques du droit international

Monday, August 22, 2016

Call for Submissions: Cambridge International Law Journal

The Cambridge International Law Journal (formerly, the Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law) has issued a call for submissions for its forthcoming volume. Here's the call:

CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL

The Cambridge International Law Journal (CILJ) (formerly the Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law) is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal run by members of the postgraduate community at the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law. The Editorial Board is pleased to invite submissions for its sixth volume.

General call for submissions – International law

The Board welcomes long articles, short articles, case notes and book reviews that engage with current themes in international law and EU law. All submissions are subject to double-blind peer review by our Editorial Board. In addition, all long articles are sent to our Academic Review Board, which consists of distinguished international law scholars and practitioners. A full list of reviewers is available at this link.

The deadline for submissions is 28th October 2016 at 11.59 p.m.

Submissions received by this date will be considered for publication in Volume 6, Issue 1, to be published in Spring 2017.

To submit, please follow this link.

Further submission information

The Journal accepts the following types of manuscript:

Long Articles between 6,000 and 10,000 words but not exceeding 12,000 words including footnotes; Short Articles not exceeding 6,000 words including footnotes; Case Notes, including substantive analysis, not exceeding 3000 words including footnotes; and Book Reviews not exceeding 2500 words including footnotes.

Please list the word count of the text and the footnotes on your manuscript.

All copies must be submitted in Word (.doc) or (.docx) format and must conform to our style guidelines, which are available at the following links:

OSCOLA Fourth edition

OSCOLA: Citing International Law Sources

Please ensure that your manuscript does not contain any reference to your personal or professional identity.

Further information is available here.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Cassella & Delabie: Faut-il prendre le droit international au sérieux ?

Sarah Cassella (Université du Maine - Law) & Lucie Delabie (Université de Picardie Jules Verne - Law) have published Faut-il prendre le droit international au sérieux ? (Pedone 2016). Contents include:
  • Photini Pazartzis, La succession d’États comme moyen de régulation des relations internationales
  • Hélène De Pooter, Place et rôle de la France à l’UNESCO : quelques observations à la suite du rapport Janicot
  • Abdulqawi A. Yusuf, L’État, le coup d’État et l’Union africaine
  • Franck Latty, Ploutocratie et personnalité juridique internationale
  • La revanche de l’État dans l’arbitrage transnational Tullio TREVES
  • Aurélie Tardieu, Face à une théorie féministe du droit international, une objection au féminin
  • Jean Combacau, L’objection à la formation et à l’opposabilité des règles internationales – le volontarisme a-t-il encore un intérêt ?
  • Géraldine Giraudeau, Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon : de la guerre de la morue à la bataille de l’or noir
  • Karel Wellens, Le gendarme se marie. Un conte d’amour, de jalousie et de tromperie
  • Athina Chanaki, Quis custodiet ipsos custodes ? La responsabilité des organisations internationales pour les violations des droits de l’homme
  • Fabien Lafouasse, « Le silence est d’or » : Réflexions juridiques sur l’espionnage entre États
  • Lucie Delabie, Gentlemen’s agreements et autres arrangements informels : la politique au secours du droit international ?
  • Saïda El Boudouhi, L’enseignement du droit international à l’université : quel intérêt ?
  • Sabrina Robert-Cuendet, Le bestiaire du droit international (ou la fable de l’animal voulant trouver sa place parmi les hommes et les États)
  • Vera El Khoury Lacoeuilhe, Témoignage : les droits de l’homme très confidentiels à l’UNESCO
  • Evelyne Lagrange, Le bon genre. Les organisations internationales côté femmes
  • Massimo Iovane, Quelle efficacité du jus cogens dans la protection des droits de l’homme ?
  • Sarah Cassella, Ambiguïtés de la faveur dans la construction d’un « système » normatif : les clauses de la protection la plus favorable
  • Geneviève Bastid Burdeau, Conclusions
  • Pierre Michel Eisemann, Encore Quelques Mots…