
The latest issue of the
International Community Law Review (Vol. 22, nos. 3-4, 2020) is out. Contents include:
- Special Issue 22.3 Rethinking the Legacy of the League of Nations
- Rossana Deplano, Introducing the Special Issue 22.3 Rethinking the Legacy of the League of Nations
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Jean d’Aspremont, The League of Nations and the Power of “Experiment Narratives” in International Institutional Law
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Nicholas Tsagourias, The League of Nations and Visions of World Order
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Nigel D. White, From Covenant to Charter: A Legacy Squandered?
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Antal Berkes, The League of Nations and the International Law of State Responsibility
- Special Issue 22.4 Regime Convergence and Lex Ferenda in IUU Fishing Disputes
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Hélène Ruiz Fabri, Makane Moïse Mbengue, & Brian McGarry, Introducing the Special Issue 22.4 Regime Convergence and Lex Ferenda in IUU Fishing Disputes: Introductory Remarks
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Nilufer Oral, Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of IUU Fishing under International Law
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Christina Voigt, Oceans, IUU Fishing, and Climate Change: Implications for International Law
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Yoshifumi Tanaka, Reflections on the Implications of Environmental Norms for Fishing: The Link between the Regulation of Fishing and the Protection of Marine Biological Diversity
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Malgosia Fitzmaurice & Mercedes Rosello, IUU Fishing as a Disputed Concept and Its Application to Vulnerable Groups: A Case Study on Arctic Fisheries
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Cymie R. Payne, Negotiation and Dispute Prevention in Global Cooperative Institutions: International Community Interests, IUU Fishing, and the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Negotiation
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Barbara Hutniczak & Frank Meere, International Co-operation as a Key Tool to Prevent IUU Fishing and Disputes over It
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Namira Negm, AU AIM Strategy and the Fragmentation of IUU Fishing Regulations in Africa: the Case of West Africa
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Valentin J. Schatz, The Snow Crab Dispute on the Continental Shelf of Svalbard: A Case-Study on Options for the Settlement of International Fisheries Access Disputes
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Marco Benatar, Not Like the Others? The Position of Associated States and Dependent Territories in Fishing Disputes
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Eve de Coning, Why Are Some Flag States Unable or Unwilling to Address IUU Fishing?
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Solène Guggisberg, Independent, Compulsory, and Centralized Verification of States’ Obligations in Fisheries: Can the IMO Audit Scheme for Shipping Law Be Used as an Example to Follow?