Saturday, March 15, 2025

Clark: Cooperative Complexity: The Next Level of Global Economic Governance

Richard Clark
(Univ. of Notre Dame - Political Science) has published Cooperative Complexity: The Next Level of Global Economic Governance (Cambridge Univ. Press 2025). Here's the abstract:
Over the course of the twentieth century, states engaged in cooperation through international organizations at unprecedented levels. However, the twenty-first century has featured the emergence of next-level forms of cooperation: international organizations working together. This pattern is especially apparent among economic international organizations, which often pool resources and expertise to jointly implement programs in member state territories. Cooperative Complexity argues that such cooperation is politically efficient but not necessarily economically efficient; it helps geopolitically aligned organizations enforce their preferred policies but can drive inefficient economic outcomes. Combining a general theoretical model with quantitative, qualitative, and experimental research designs, this book disentangles the complex ties that connect international organizations. In doing so, it reveals how a deeper understanding of the supply side of international finance is critical for gaining insights about the form, effectiveness, and likely future of global economic governance.

Cohen: The International Order, International Law, and the Definition of Security

Harlan Grant Cohen (Fordham Univ. - Law) has posted The International Order, International Law, and the Definition of Security (Michigan Journal of International Law, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:

As economic security has seemingly moved to the center of American and European foreign policy, both the United States and the European Union have broadened their interpretation of international law rules governing security, coercion, and intervention. But these interpretations are not exactly new, echoing developing state interpretations of international law that developed states had long ago seemingly rejected. How are these once moribund interpretations of security, force, and coercion being brought back to life?

This essay argues that these interpretative shifts highlight the role of the international order as an interpretative mechanism within international law. Borrowing from the work of Robert Cover, it explains the ways that the international order acts as a jurispathic agent within the system, judging which interpretations live on and which are cast aside. As global power shifts, the international order shifts with it, potentially reopening interpretative fights over international law. Today’s fights over the meaning of security, force, and coercion thus reflect both the realities of a changing order and the battle to shape the one to come.

Landefeld: Individuals in International Humanitarian Law: A Historical Analysis

Sarina Landefeld
(Univ. of Leicester - Law) has published Individuals in International Humanitarian Law: A Historical Analysis (Hart Publishing 2025). Here's the abstract:

This book offers a new, more critical perspective on the regulation and protection of individuals under international humanitarian law.

Providing a historical account of the changing conceptualisation of individuals since 1864, the study draws on social constructivism. This approach casts light on the struggle of making sense of, and agreeing on, the position of individuals in armed conflicts during the law-making process, often hidden by international humanitarian law's conventional narratives. This intriguing study grapples with a difficult and disputed area of the law of armed conflict, making a singular and significant contribution which will be welcomed by all scholars in the field.

Navarro: The Effectiveness of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: The Case of Indigenous Territorial Rights

Gabriela CB Navarro
(Federal Univ. of Minas Gerais - Law) has published The Effectiveness of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: The Case of Indigenous Territorial Rights (Hart Publishing 2025). Here's the abstract:

The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has the most developed jurisprudence on indigenous rights, yet this case law is understudied. This book addresses this gap by exploring the Court and its cases from both the perspective of international law and the legal protection of indigenous territories.

Setting out the network of actors and institutions involved in such litigation, it examines the motivations and constraints in domestic politics affecting international orders (and by extension the impact of the Court). It provides both an important statement on the effectiveness of international tribunals and a fascinating insight into the evolution of indigenous rights.

New Issue: International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics

The latest issue of International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics (Vol. 25, no. 1, March 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Tibebu Shito Kebede, The influence of domestic politics on the transboundary water interactions in the Eastern Nile
  • Huseyin Caliskan, Ustuner Birben, & Sezgin Ozden, Forest management in Türkiye: economic pressures, legal frameworks, and ecological consequences
  • Faradj Koliev & Karin Bäckstrand, Citizen preferences for climate policy implementation: the role of multistakeholder partnerships
  • So Yeon Kim & Hyun Jung Kim, ‘Common but differentiated’ motivations? Requests for advisory opinions concerning climate change and the law of the sea
  • Kalia Ruth Barkai & Harald Winkler, Developing a framework for assessing equity in national contributions to the global goal on adaptation
  • Okechukwu Enechi & Philipp Pattberg, Stakeholder motivations for participation in partnerships for the SDGS: the case of Nigeria
  • Luciana C. Silvestri & Marisa Roig-Cerdeño, Genetic resources are, above all, information: perspectives from law, biology and economics
  • Liliana Lizarazo-Rodriguez, Alice Lopes Fabris, & Doreen Montag, Indigenous peoples as trustees of forests: a bio-socio-cultural approach to international law

New Issue: International Community Law Review

The latest issue of the International Community Law Review (Vol. 27, nos. 1-2, 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Issue: The Evolving Role of International Judicial Advisory Opinions
    • Kathryn Allinson & Beril Sogut, Editorial: Special Issue on the Evolving Role of International Judicial Advisory Opinions
    • Christoph U. Priess, Parallel Advisory Proceedings: The Climate Change Advisory Proceedings Before the ICJ, the ITLOS and the IACtHR
    • Andreas Kulick, Between Advice and Miracle: Expectations and Persuasiveness of ICJ Advisory Opinions
    • Walter Arévalo-Ramírez & Andrés Rousset-Siri, Measuring the Impact of Advisory Opinions in the Inter-American Human Rights System Categorizing the Effects of Advisory Opinions in States and the Organs Involved in Their Implementation
    • Anna Rubbi, Laura Behre, & Natalia Ameen-Rey, Upcoming Advisory Opinions of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Analysing the Trajectory of the Court’s Advisory Opinions
    • Andrea Longo, Beyond Climate Change Obligations: Which Lessons from the ITLOS Advisory Opinion on Climate Change and Ocean Acidification for the Progressive Development of the Law of the Sea?
    • Muyiwa Adigun, Climate Change Litigation before International Human Rights Tribunals in Africa: The Role of Advisory Opinions
    • Sarah Thin, The Benefits of an Open-Door Policy: International Organisations and the Promotion of Common and Community Interests in ICJ Advisory Proceedings

Friday, March 14, 2025

Call for Papers: Narratives in International Courts and Tribunals

The Latin American Society of International Law's Interest Group on International Courts and Tribunals has issued a call for papers for a workshop on "Narratives in International Courts and Tribunals," to take place online on June 25, 2025. The call is here.

Mayer: Environmental Assessment as a Tool for Climate Change Mitigation

Benoit Mayer
(Univ. of Reading - Law) has published Environmental Assessment as a Tool for Climate Change Mitigation (Oxford Univ. Press 2024). Here's the abstract:

Most governments have established procedures to appraise the environmental impacts of proposed activities. The focus of these environmental assessment procedures has long been on local environmental issues, such as air, water, and land pollution, which have a direct and concrete effect on communities. In recent years, however, these procedures have increasingly been used to consider how activities could result in the emission of greenhouse gases and exacerbate climate change.

Environmental Assessment as a Tool for Climate Change Mitigation builds on a broad survey of over one hundred national environmental assessment practices - legislation, guiding documents, cases, and administrative practice - to reflect on the main conceptual and practical issues facing climate assessment. By presenting and discussing jurisdictional developments and national debates in a global comparative perspective, this book aims to enrich our collective understanding of the modalities of and, ultimately, the mitigation opportunities arising from, the use of climate assessment in relation to proposed activities. The author concludes this timely and forward-looking volume by identifying good practices that lawmakers, regulators, national agencies, judges, and lawyers should consider when developing and applying the law on climate assessment.

New Issue: International Review of the Red Cross

The latest issue of the International Review of the Red Cross (Vol. 106, no. 927, 2024) is out. The theme is: "IHL & Peace." Contents include:
  • The ICRC's approach to peace: Interview with Eva Svoboda: Director of International Law, Policy and Archives, ICRC
  • Cordula Droege, International humanitarian law and peace: A brief overview
  • Ignazio Cassis, Wars have limits
  • Interview with Franz Perrez: Director-General, Directorate of International Public Law, Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Interview with Itonde Kakoma: President and CEO, Interpeace
  • Daniel Palmieri, “Si vis pacem, impera bellum”: The ICRC, international humanitarian law and peace
  • Evelyne Schmid, Optional but not qualified: Neutrality, the UN Charter and humanitarian objectives
  • Diego Stöcklin, Redefining the neutral intermediary role: Balancing theoretical ideas with practical realities through the ICRC's experience in Yemen
  • Rebecca Brubaker, Will Bennett & Hannah Ajelet Eriksen, Towards common ground: Strategies for effective collaboration between the humanitarian and peacebuilding communities
  • Simon Robins & Jill Stockwell, Addressing missing persons arising from armed conflict as a driver of peace: Towards a research agenda
  • Juana Inés Acosta López, Seeking balance: The role of Article 6(5) of Additional Protocol II in balancing justice and peace in transitions from armed conflict to peace
  • Benjamin R. Farley & Alka Pradhan, Establishing a practical test for the end of non-international armed conflict
  • Steven van de Put & Magdalena Pacholska, Beyond retribution: Individual reparations for IHL violations as peace facilitators
  • Arnaaz Nizami Ameer, Whose war is it anyway? Proportionate reparations in wars of aggression
  • Luke Moffett & Nikhil Narayan, Provisional justice in protracted conflicts: The place of temporality in bridging the international humanitarian law and transitional justice divide
  • Noël Mfuranzima, Jus post bellum: Scope and assessment of the applicable legal framework
  • Wendy Lambourne, International humanitarian law, jus post bellum and transformative justice

New Issue: Transnational Criminal Law Review

The latest issue of the Transnational Criminal Law Review (Vol. 3, no. 2, 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Gordon Hook, Express Trusts and Beneficial Ownership in the Financial Action Task Force Recommendations: Conceptual Distortions
    • Sam Hickey, Compensating the Victims of Foreign Bribery
    • Deborah Nidel, Structural Ambiguity: Typologising Joint Investigation Teams
  • Notes and Comments
    • Dao Le Thu & Yvon Dandurand, International Cooperation in Combating Transnational Crime in Southeast Asia: Why has progress been so slow?

Thursday, March 13, 2025

New Issue: International Organization

The latest issue of International Organization (Vol. 79, no. 1, Winter 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Caleb Pomeroy, The Damocles Delusion: The Sense of Power Inflates Threat Perception in World Politics
    • Tessa Devereaux, The Determinants of Insurgent Gender Governance
    • Casey Crisman-Cox & Michael Gibilisco, Tug of War: The Heterogeneous Effects of Outbidding Between Terrorist Groups
  • Essay
    • Stacie E. Goddard & Colleen Larkin, Nuclear Shibboleths: The Logics and Future of Nuclear Nonuse
  • Research Notes
    • Nikhar Gaikwad, Federica Genovese, & Dustin Tingley, Climate Action from Abroad: Assessing Mass Support for Cross-Border Climate Transfers
    • Jason Lyall & Yuri Zhukov, Fratricidal Coercion in Modern War

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

New Issue: Chicago Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Chicago Journal of International Law (Vol. 25, no. 2, Winter 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Richard Albert, Decolonial Constitutionalism
  • Vivek Krishnamurthy, Anchoring Digital Sovereignty
  • Gabriele Wadlig, The International Law of Land (Grabbing): Human Rights and Development in the Context of Racial Capitalism

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

New Issue: Human Rights Law Review

The latest issue of the Human Rights Law Review (Vol. 25, no. 1, March 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Spyridoula Katsoni, Is the Obligation Not to Refoule a Positive Obligation? An Intermediate Approach Toward the Classification Dilemma
    • Samantha Besson, The Institutional Guarantee of the Human Right to Science
  • Short Articles & Recent Developments
    • Patrick Leisure, Does the Osman Test Go to School? Recent Developments Concerning States’ Positive Obligations to Protect Children in School

Monday, March 10, 2025

Murphy: The Human Right to Resist in International and Constitutional Law

Shannonbrooke Murphy
(St Thomas Univ.) has published The Human Right to Resist in International and Constitutional Law (Cambridge Univ. Press 2025). Here's the abstract:
The human right to resist is a contemporary legal concept with an ancient pedigree. Although it has received recognition in constitutions, customary international law and human rights treaties, and acknowledgment by leading publicists of international law, it remains obscure compared to other human rights. In this innovative and comprehensive book, Shannonbrooke Murphy addresses the perennial question of who has a 'right' to resist – and what, when, why, and how, from a legal perspective. Using a systematic and comparative approach to analyzing both the theoretical concept and the provisions in positive law, this study aims to establish that a 'right to resist' can be recognized and codified as an enforceable 'human right', proposing a common conceptual language and an analytical framework for evaluating the legal basis of claims. Murphy makes a strong and detailed case for a firmer place for the 'right to resist' in the human rights lexicon.

Sunday, March 9, 2025

New Issue: Military Law and the Law of War Review / Revue de Droit Militaire et de Droit de la Guerre

The latest issue of the Military Law and the Law of War Review / Revue de Droit Militaire et de Droit de la Guerre (Vol. 62, no. 2, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Samuel White & Ikhwan Fazli, Pax Britannica: a case study of pre-Hague Imperial laws of war
  • Mateusz Piątkowski, Depictions of war crimes and international humanitarian law in video games
  • Helen Stamp, Corporate data enablers: a missing piece in the regulatory response to the military use of artificial intelligence

Chapdelaine-Feliciati: The Status of the Girl Child under International Law: A Semioethic Analysis

Clara Chapdelaine-Feliciati
(Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool Univ.) has published The Status of the Girl Child under International Law: A Semioethic Analysis (Cambridge Univ. Press 2025). Here's the abstract:
Clara Chapdelaine-Feliciati offers the first comprehensive study of the status of the girl child under international law. This book significantly contributes to bridging two fields usually studied separately: law and semiotics. The author engages in the novel legal semiotics theory to decode the meaning of international treaties (mainly the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and International Covenants) and assess whether the provisions, as formulated, clearly identify the girl child and take into account the obstacles she faces as a result of sexism, childism, and intersectional discrimination. This is also the first book to apply The Significs Meaning Triad – Sense, Meaning, Significance – in international law, and Semioethics for both a diagnosis and prognosis of problematic signs in view of modifying the wording of relevant treaties.

New Issue: Journal of Human Rights and the Environment

The latest issue of the Journal of Human Rights and the Environment (Vol. 16, no. 1, February 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Jane Bennett, William E Connolly, Dorothy Kwek, & Anna Grear, Eco-social new-materialist reflections for the Anthropocene
  • Jane Bennett, Acting amidst: some concepts and practices
  • William E Connolly, The Anthropocene as abstract machine
  • Anna Grear, Jane Bennett, Nick Fox, Teresa Dillon, Emily Grabham, Mads Esjing, William Connolly, Andrew Vincent, Dorothy Kwek, Charlotte Wrigley, Julian Brigstocke, Branwen Gruffydd-Jones, Harshavardhan Bhat, & Alex Damianos, ‘Acting amidst’ – a conversation with Jane Bennett, facilitated by Anna Grear
  • William E Connolly, Jane Bennett, Anna Grear, Teresa Dillon, Gulshan Khan, Harshavadhan Bhat, Alex Damianos, & Nick Fox, The Anthropocene as abstract machine – a conversation
  • Elizabeth R Johnson, An other time
  • Nick J Fox, Vital materialism from social theory to sociological lines of flight
  • Julian Brigstocke, Drifting bodies, monstrous forms, cosmic meanings: a new materialist geography of Hong Kong’s sandy grounds
  • Charlotte Wrigley, Discontinuity and the underground: permafrost imaginaries and subterranean worlds
  • Emily Jones, Influencer
  • Matilda Arvidsson, On gardens of the Anthropocene: gendered violence, colonial legal enclosures, and feminist posthuman kinship
  • Sian Sullivan, On doodling and other modes of engagement in meltdown

Symposium: Artificial Intelligence and International Humanitarian Law

On April 3-4, 2025, Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems will hold its 2025 symposium on "Artificial Intelligence and International Humanitarian Law," in Iowa City. Details are here.