Monday, December 16, 2024

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 37, no. 4, December 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Ingo Venzke, Against impact
  • International Legal Theory: Symposium on Global South Perspectives on Methology and Critique in International Law
    • Dimitri Van Den Meerssche, Global south perspectives on methodology and critique in international law
    • Abdelghany Sayed, What we talk about when we talk about ‘human shields’: Reading international law through images
    • W.L. Cheah, Reconsidering ‘Sook Ching’ victimhood: A microhistory of Singapore’s Nishimura trial
    • Idriss Paul-Armand Fofana, The two faces of Franco-Sudanian Treaties: The peripheral practice of ratification as evidence of transregional international law in the nineteenth century
    • Cristina Blanco Vizarreta, Rethinking international law along with Amazonian ontologies: problematizing human-non-human divisions
    • Juliana Santos de Carvalho, Under the shadow of legality: A shadow hauntology on the legal construction of the Women, Peace and Security agenda
  • International Law and Practice
    • Lena Holzer, International sports federations as de facto lawmakers: Queer-feminist explorations of the gendered power of sports law
    • Fabian Eichberger, Self-judgment in international law: Between judicialization and pushback
    • Géraldine Giraudeau, Lili Song, & Morsen Mosses, Chagos in the South Pacific? The principle of self-determination and the France-Vanuatu dispute over the Matthew and Hunter Islands
    • Du Li, Legal challenges of attributing malicious cyber activities against space activities
    • Raphaël van Steenberghe, The armed conflict in Gaza, and its complexity under international law: Jus ad bellum, jus in bello, and international justice
  • International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
    • René Provost & Vishakha Wijenayake, Collateral kids: Weighing the lives of children in targeting
    • Bruno Biazatti, To divide or not to divide: Innovations on liability for reparations in the Ntaganda case