Showing posts with label European Journal of International Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European Journal of International Law. Show all posts

Friday, August 13, 2021

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 32, no. 2, May 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Editorial: The Unequal Impact of the Pandemic on Scholars with Care Responsibilities: What Can Journals (and Others) Do?; Cancelling Carl Schmitt?; Vital Statistics; In This Issue; In This Issue – Reviews
  • Articles
    • Andreas von Arnauld, How to Illegalize Past Injustice: Reinterpreting the Rules of Intertemporality
    • Vincent Beyer, Dispute Settlement in Preferential Trade Agreements and the WTO: A Network Analysis of Idleness and Choice of Forum
    • Marco Longobardo, State Immunity and Judicial Countermeasures
    • Yejoon Rim, State Continuity in the Absence of Government: The Underlying Rationale in International Law
  • Focus: Business and Human Rights
    • Neli Frost, Out with the ‘Old’, in with the ‘New’: Challenging Dominant Regulatory Approaches in the Field of Human Rights
    • Andreas Kulick, Corporate Human Rights?
  • Roaming Charges: Gendering
  • Symposium: Use of Force and Human Rights
    • Dapo Akande & Katie A Johnston, Human Rights and Resort to Force: Introduction to the Symposium
    • Eliav Lieblich, The Humanization of Jus ad Bellum: Prospects and Perils
    • Kevin Jon Heller, The Illegality of ‘Genuine’ Unilateral Humanitarian Intervention
    • Federica I Paddeu, Humanitarian Intervention and the Law of State Responsibility
    • Dapo Akande & Katie A Johnston, Implications of the Diversity of the Rules on the Use of Force for Change in the Law
  • Book Reviews
    • Wouter Werner, reviewing Anton Orlinov Petrov, Expert Laws of War: Restating and Making Law in Expert Processes
    • Yuliya Chernykh, reviewing Jean Ho, State Responsibility for Breaches of Investment Contracts
    • Roger O’Keefe, reviewing Tom Ruys and Nicolas Angelet (eds), Luca Ferro (assistant ed.), The Cambridge Handbook of Immunities and International Law
    • Marco Longobardo & Marco Roscini, reviewing Giulio Bartolini (ed.), A History of International Law in Italy
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, reviewing Vincent-Joël Proulx, Institutionalizing State Responsibility: Global Security and UN Organs
  • The Last Page
    • The Vanity of This World

Friday, July 23, 2021

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 32, no. 1, February 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Editorial: On My Way In II: Countering Gender Stereotypes in Letters of Reference and Shifting Academic Valorization While We Are at It; Changes in the Masthead; In This Issue; In this Issue – Reviews
  • EJIL Symposium Issue: International and Democracy Revisited
    • Jan Klabbers, Doreen Lustig, André Nollkaemper, Sarah Nouwen, Michal Saliternik, & Joseph H H Weiler, International Law and Democracy Revisited: Introduction to the Symposium
  • EJIL Debate!
    • Akbar Rasulov, ‘From the Wells of Disappointment’: The Curious Case of the International Law of Democracy and the Politics of International Legal Scholarship
    • Brad R Roth, The Trajectory of the Democratic Entitlement Thesis in International Legal Scholarship: A Reply to Akbar Rasulov
  • Articles
    • Giacomo Tagiuri, Can Supranational Law Enhance Democracy? EU Economic Law as a Market-Democratizing Project
    • Deborah Whitehall, The Ship of Democracy
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, New Responses to the Legitimacy Crisis of International Institutions: The Role of ‘Civil Society’ and the Rise of the Principle of Participation of ‘The Most Affected’ in International Institutional Law
    • Barrie Sander, Democratic Disruption in the Age of Social Media: Between Marketized and Structural Conceptions of Human Rights Law
  • Roaming Charges: Barrista, San Juan
  • Critical Review of Governance
    • Erika de Wet, The African Union’s Struggle Against ‘Unconstitutional Change of Government’: From a Moral Prescription to a Requirement under International Law?
    • Ayelet Berman, Between Participation and Capture in International Rule-Making: The WHO Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors
  • Critical Review of Jurisprudence
    • Dmitry Kurnosov, Pragmatic Adjudication of Election Cases in the European Court of Human Rights
    • Matthew Saul, Shaping Legislative Processes from Strasbourg
  • Review Essays
    • Itamar Mann, Attack by Design: Australia’s Offshore Detention System and the Literature of Atrocity
    • Richard Clements, Near, Far, Wherever You Are: Distance and Proximity in International Criminal Law
  • Book Reviews
    • Kirsten Sellars, reviewing Francine Hirsch, Soviet Judgment at Nuremberg: A New History of the International Military Tribunal after World War II
    • Robert McCorquodale, reviewing of Martina Buscemi, Nicole Lazzerini, Laura Magi and Deborah Russo (eds), Legal Sources in Business and Human Rights: Evolving Dynamics in International and European Law
    • Gail Lythgoe, reviewing Alex Jeffrey, The Edge of Law: Legal Geographies of a War Crimes Court
    • Umut Özsu, reviewing Christopher R. W. Dietrich, Oil Revolution: Anticolonial Elites, Sovereign Rights, and the Economic Culture of Decolonization
    • Helmut Philipp Aust, reviewing Malgosia Fitzmaurice and Panos Merkouris, Treaties in Motion: The Evolution of Treaties from Formation to Termination
    • Fernando Dias Simões, reviewing Katia Fach Gómez, Key Duties of International Investment Arbitrators: A Transnational Study of Legal and Ethical Dilemmas
  • The Last Page
    • 29 and 30 November 2020

Thursday, April 29, 2021

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 31, no. 4, November 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Editorial: Peer Review – Institutional Hypocrisy and Author Ambivalence; EJIL Roll of Honour; 2020 EJIL Peer Reviewer Prize; Letters to the Editors – A Note from EJIL and I•CON; Legal/Illegal; 10 Good Reads; In This Issue; A Bumper Review Section
  • Afterword: The Guiding Principles on Shared Responsibility in International Law and Its Critics
    • B. S. Chimni, The Articles on State Responsibility and the Guiding Principles of Shared Responsibility: A TWAIL Perspective
    • Lorenzo Gasbarri, On the Benefit of Reinventing the Wheel: The Notion of a Single Internationally Wrongful Act
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Guiding Principles on Shared Responsibility in International Law: Too Much or Too Little?
    • Odette Murray, Liability In Solidum in the Law of International Responsibility: A Comment on Guiding Principle 7
    • Federica I. Paddeu, Shared Non-responsibility in International Law? Defences and the Responsibility of Co-perpetrators and Accessories in the Guiding Principles
  • Articles
    • Frédéric Gilles Sourgens, The Precaution Presumption
    • Steven R. Ratner, The Aggravating Duty of Non-Aggravation
    • Yury Rovnov, Appropriate Level of Protection: The Most Misconceived Notion of WTO Law
    • Heidi Nichols Haddad, When Global Becomes Municipal: US Cities Localizing Unratified International Human Rights Law
  • The Theatre of International Law
    • Mickey Zar, Piracy: A Treasure Box of Otherness
  • Roaming Charges: COVID Autumn
  • The European Tradition in International Law: Camilo Barcia Trelles
    • Ignacio de la Rasilla, Camilo Barcia Trelles in and beyond Vitoria's Shadow (1888–1977)
    • Randall Lesaffer, The Cradle of International Law: Camilo Barcia Trelles on Francisco de Vitoria at The Hague (1927)
    • Juan Pablo Scarfi, Camilo Barcia Trelles on the Meaning of the Monroe Doctrine and the Legacy of Vitoria in the Americas
    • José María Beneyto, Camilo Barcia Trelles on Francisco de Vitoria: At the Crossroads of Carl Schmitt’s Grossraum and James Brown Scott’s ‘Modern International Law’
  • Review Essays
    • Cait Storr, ‘The War Rages On’: Expanding Concepts of Decolonization in International Law, reviewing Jochen von Bernstorff and Philipp Dann eds., The Battle for International Law: South-North Perspectives on the Decolonization Era
    • Simon Chesterman, Can International Law Survive a Rising China?, reviewing Congyan Cai, The Rise of China and International Law: Taking Chinese Exceptionalism Seriously
    • Jean d’Aspremont, Belgium and the Fabrication of the International Legal Discipline, reviewing Vincent Genin, Le laboratoire belge du droit international: Une communauté épistémique et internationale de juristes (1869–1914)
  • Impressions
    • Erika de Wet, Twenty-Five-Years of Dugard’s International Law: A Lasting Impression
  • Book Reviews
    • Filippo Fontanelli, reviing Santi Romano, The Legal Order (Ed. Mariano Croce)
    • Sarah C. Dunstan, reviewing Christopher R. Rossi, Whiggish International Law: Elihu Root, the Monroe Doctrine, and International Law in the Americas
    • Catherine O’Rourke, rewiewing Gina Heathcote, Feminist Dialogues on International Law: Successes, Tensions, Futures
    • Anne Peters, reviewing Anna Chadwick, Law and the Political Economy of Hunger
    • Dimitri Van Den Meerssche, reviewing Rebecca Schmidt, Regulatory Integration Across Borders: Public–Private Cooperation in Transnational Regulation
    • Fuad Zarbiyev, Rose Parfitt, The Process of International Legal Reproduction: Inequality, Historiography, Resistance
    • Mavluda Sattorova, reviewing Jérémie Gilbert, Natural Resources and Human Rights: An Appraisal
    • David Schneiderman, reviewing Markus Krajewski and Rhea Tamara Hoffman eds., Research Handbook on Foreign Direct Investment
    • Jean Ho, reviewing Aikaterini Florou, Contractual Renegotiations and International Investment Arbitration: A Relational Contract Theory Interpretation of Investment Treaties
    • Esmé Shirlow, reviewing Martin Jarrett, Contributory Fault and Investor Misconduct in Investment Arbitration
    • Christine Schwöbel-Patel, reviewing Maria Elander, Figuring Victims in International Criminal Justice: The Case of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal
    • Henry Lovat, reviewing Kamari Maxine Clarke, Affective Justice: The International Criminal Court and the Pan-Africanist Pushback
  • The Last Page
    • Emily Dickinson, We Grow Accustomed to the Dark

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 31, no. 3, August 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Editorial: The UK Taken in Adultery. Who Will Cast the First Stone?; A Modest Proposal on Zoom Teaching; In This Issue
  • Articles
    • Laurence R Helfer & Erik Voeten, Walking Back Human Rights in Europe?
    • Ríán Derrig, Educating American Lawyers: The New Haven School’s Jurisprudence of Personal Character
    • Rémi Bachand, What’s Behind the WTO Crisis? A Marxist Analysis
    • Merijn Chamon, Provisional Application of Treaties: The EU’s Contribution to the Development of International Law
  • Focus: Foreign Cyberattacks Against Civilians
    • Herbert Lin & Joel Trachtman, Diagonal Export Controls to Counter Diagonal Transnational Attacks on Civil Society
    • Nicholas Tsagourias & Michael Farrell, Cyber Attribution: Technical and Legal Approaches and Challenges
    • Martha Finnemore & Duncan B Hollis, Beyond Naming and Shaming: Accusations and International Law in Cybersecurity
  • EJIL: Exchange!
    • Henri de Waele, A New League of Extraordinary Gentlemen? The Professionalization of International Law Scholarship in the Netherlands, 1919–1940
    • Janne E Nijman, Marked Absences: Locating Gender and Race in International Legal History
  • Roaming Charges: Visible Absences
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Ardi Imseis, Negotiating the Illegal: On the United Nations and the Illegal Occupation of Palestine, 1967–2020
    • David Hughes, Of Tactics, Illegal Occupation and the Boundaries of Legal Capability: A Reply to Ardi Imseis
  • Changing the Guards - Part III
    • Sara Hagemann, Politics and Diplomacy: Lessons from Donald Tusk’s Time as President of the European Council
  • Review Essays
    • Patryk I Labuda, The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and Post-Genocide Justice 25 Years On
    • Leonardo Borlini, On Financial Nationalism and International Law: Sovereignty, Cooperation and Hard/Soft Governance in International Finance
  • Book Reviews
    • Sophie Rigney, reviewing Phil Clark, Distant Justice: The Impact of the International Criminal Court on African Politics
    • Ingo Venzke, reviewing Anne Saab, Narratives of Hunger in International Law: Feeding the World in Times of Climate Change
    • Ntina Tzouvala, reviewing Alvaro Santos, Chantal Thomas and David Trubek (eds), World Trade and Investment Law Reimagined: A Progressive Agenda for an Inclusive Globalization
    • Jarrod Hepburn, reviewing Daniel Peat, Comparative Reasoning in International Courts and Tribunals
    • Alexandre Skander Galand, reviewing Claus Kreß and Stefan Barriga (eds), The Crime of Aggression: A Commentary
  • The Last Page
    • Valentin Jeutner, The Last Page

Friday, September 25, 2020

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 31, no. 2, September 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Gender in Academic Publishing; The Legality of the Israeli Annexation – Redux; In This Issue
  • Articles
    • Maria Laura Marceddu & Pietro Ortolani, What Is Wrong with Investment Arbitration? Evidence from a Set of Behavioural Experiments
    • Daniel Statman, Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Micha Mandel, Michael Skerker and Steven De Wijze, Unreliable Protection: An Experimental Study of Experts’ In Bello Proportionality Decisions
    • Jasenka Ferizović, The Case of Female Perpetrators of International Crimes: Exploratory Insights and New Research Directions
  • Symposium: Theorizing International Organizations Law
    • Jan Klabbers & Guy Fiti Sinclair, On Theorizing International Organizations Law: Editors’ Introduction
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, Autorité oblige: The Rise and Fall of Hans Kelsen’s Legal Concept of International Institutions
    • Guy Fiti Sinclair, C. Wilfred Jenks and the Futures of International Organizations Law
    • Evelyne Lagrange, Functionalism According to Paul Reuter: Playing a Lone Hand
    • Jan Klabbers, Schermers’ Dilemma
    • Ian Johnstone, Louis Sohn’s Legacy
    • Umut Özsu, Organizing Internationally: Georges Abi-Saab, the Congo Crisis and the Decolonization of the United Nations
  • Roaming Charges: Still Life Portrait
  • Focus: Human Rights and Science
    • Anna-Maria Hubert, The Human Right to Science and Its Relationship to International Environmental Law
    • Jacqueline Peel, The ‘Rights’ Way to Democratize the Science–Policy Interface in International Environmental Law? A Reply to Anna-Maria Hubert
    • Rumiana Yotova & Bartha M. Knoppers, The Right to Benefit from Science and Its Implications for Genomic Data Sharing
  • EJIL: Debates!
    • Andreas J. Ullmann & Andreas von Staden, Challenges and Pitfalls in Research on Compliance with the ‘Views’ of UN Human Rights Treaty Bodies: A Reply to Vera Shikhelman
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, Is IHL a Sham? A Reply to Eyal Benvenisti and Doreen Lustig
    • Eyal Benvenisti & Doreen Lustig, Beyond the ‘Sham’ Critique and the Narrative of Humanitarianism: A Rejoinder to Jochen von Bernstorff
  • Changing the Guards - Part II
    • Daniel Sarmiento, The Juncker Presidency – A Study in Character
  • Review Essays
    • Jan Klabbers, The Days of Wine and Roses. Review of Rosalyn Higgins, Philippa Webb, Dapo Akande, Sandesh Sivakumaran and James Sloan, Oppenheim’s International Law: United Nations
    • Christiane Ahlborn, The Allocation of International Responsibility between International Organizations and Their Member States: A Case of Indirect Responsibility? Review of Nikolaos Voulgaris, Allocating International Responsibility Between Member States and International Organizations
  • Book Reviews
    • Samantha Besson, reviewing Fernando Lusa Bordin, The Analogy between States and International Organizations
    • Frédéric Dopagne, reviewing Éric David, Droit des organisations internationales
    • Lorenzo Gasbarri, reviewing Gerhard Ullrich, The Law of the International Civil Service
  • The Last Page
    • Judge Epitácio Pessoa, A Selection

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 31, no. 1, February 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • COVID-19 and EJIL; The Self-Asphyxiation of Democracy; Publishers, Academics and the Battles over Copyright and Your Rights I; Festschrift? ‘That Which Is Hateful to You, Do Not Do to Your Fellow! That is the Whole Torah; The Rest is Interpretation’ (from the Elder Hillel in Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 31a); Vital Statistics; A Less Exclusive Submission Process; In this Issue
  • The EJIL Foreword
    • André Nollkaemper, Jean d’Aspremont, Christiane Ahlborn, Berenice Boutin, Nataša Nedeski, & Ilias Plakokefalos, with the collaboration of Dov Jacobs, Guiding Principles on Shared Responsibility in International Law
  • Articles
    • Ezgi Yildiz, A Court with Many Faces: Judicial Characters and Modes of Norm Development in the European Court of Human Rights
    • Tilmann Altwicker, Non-Universal Arguments under the European Convention on Human Rights
    • Eyal Benvenisti & Doreen Lustig, Monopolizing War: Codifying the Laws of War to Reassert Governmental Authority, 1856–1874
  • Focus: Interpretation and Custom
    • Danae Azaria, ‘Codification by Interpretation’: The International Law Commission as an Interpreter of International Law
    • Kristina Daugirdas, International Organizations and the Creation of Customary International Law
    • Orfeas Chasapis Tassinis, Customary International Law: Interpretation from Beginning to End
    • Jan Klabbers, The Cheshire Cat That Is International Law
  • Roaming Charges: Death Wall
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Ivar Alvik, The Justification of Privilege in International Investment Law: Preferential Treatment of Foreign Investors as a Problem of Legitimacy
    • Jürgen Kurtz, On Foreign Investor ‘Privilege’ and the Limits of the Law: A Reply to Ivar Alvik
  • Critical Review of Governance
    • Dai Tamada, The Timor Sea Conciliation: The Unique Mechanism of Dispute Settlement
  • Changing the Guards
    • Michael Waibel, The EU’s Most Influential Economic Policy-maker: Mario Draghi at the European Central Bank
  • Review Essay
    • Lorenzo Cotula, Investment Contracts and International Law: Charting a Research Agenda. Review of Rudolf Dolzer, Petroleum Contracts and International Law; Jola Gjuzi, Stabilization Clauses in International Investment Law: A Sustainable Development Approach
  • Book Reviews
    • Jan Klabbers, reviewing Quinn Slobodian, Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism
    • Alina Miron, reviewing Stephen Fietta and Robin Cleverly, A Practitioner’s Guide to Maritime Boundary Delimitation; Alex G. Oude Elferink, Tore Henriksen and Veierud Busch (eds), Maritime Boundary Delimitation: The Case Law. Is It Consistent and Predictable?
    • Joshua Paine, reviewing Rodrigo Polanco, The Return of the Home State to Investor-State Disputes: Bringing Back Diplomatic Protection?
  • The Last Page
    • Theodor W. Adorno, ... nach Auschwitz

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 30, no. 4, November 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Celebrating Peer Review: EJIL’s Roll of Honour and Announcement of the first EJIL Peer Review Prize; Brexit – Apportioning the Blame; Once Upon a Time in Catalonia…; 10 Good Reads; In This Issue
  • Afterword: Martti Koskenniemi and His Critics
    • Janne E. Nijman, Grotius’ ‘Rule of Law’ and the Human Sense of Justice: An Afterword to Martti Koskenniemi’s Foreword
    • Francesca Iurlaro, International Legal Histories as Orders: An Afterword to Martti Koskenniemi’s Foreword
    • Benjamin Straumann, The Rule of Law: Sociology or Normative Theory? An Afterword to Martti Koskenniemi’s Foreword
  • Articles
    • Raffaela Kunz, Judging International Judgments Anew? The Human Rights Courts before Domestic Courts
    • Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Entrepreneurial Justice: Syria, the Commission for International Justice and Accountability and the Renewal of International Criminal Justice
    • Francisco de Abreu Duarte, ‘But the Last Word Is Ours’: The Monopoly of Jurisdiction of the Court of Justice of the European Union in Light of the Investment Court System
  • Roaming Charges: Kaleidoscope
  • Symposium: The Psychology of International Law
    • Anne van Aaken & Tomer Broude, The Psychology of International Law: An Introduction
    • Anne van Aaken, Experimental Insights for International Legal Theory
    • Doron Teichman and Eyal Zamir, Nudge Goes International
    • Anton Strezhnev, Beth A. Simmons & Matthew D. Kim, Rulers or Rules? International Law, Elite Cues and Public Opinion
    • Tomer Broude & Inbar Levy, Outcome Bias and Expertise in Investigations under International Humanitarian Law
    • Moshe Hirsch, Cognitive Sociology, Social Cognition and Coping with Racial Discrimination in International Law
    • Sergio Puig, Debiasing International Economic Law
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Nicolas Lamp, How Should We Think about the Winners and Losers from Globalization? Three Narratives and Their Implications for the Redesign of International Economic Agreements
    • Bernard Hoekman & Douglas Nelson, How Should We Think about the Winners and Losers from Globalization? A Reply to Nicolas Lamp
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Wendy Ng, Changing Global Dynamics and International Competition Law: Considering China’s Potential Impact
    • Eleanor Fox, Changing Global Dynamics and International Competition Law: A Reply to Wendy Ng
  • Impressions: Reviving a Tradition
    • Pierre-Marie Dupuy, Michel Virally, L’organisation mondiale
  • Book Reviews
    • Gian Luca Burci, reviewing Benjamin Mason Meier and Lawrence O. Gostin (eds). Human Rights in Global Health: Rights-Based Governance for a Globalizing World/li>
    • Mark A. Drumbl, reviewing Marcos Zunino. Justice Framed: A Genealogy of Transitional Justice
    • Sari Kouvo, reviewing Ratna Kapur. Gender, Alterity and Human Rights: Freedom in a Fishbowl
    • Tania Voon, reviewing Emily Sipiorski. Good Faith in International Investment Arbitration
  • The Last Page
    • Kalypso Nicolaidis, What kind of Brit shall I be?

Saturday, December 14, 2019

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 30, no. 3, August 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • On My Way In – I: Impressions of a New Editor-in-Chief’s First Months in the EJIL Engine Room; On My Way Out – Advice to Young Scholars VI: WeakPoint, On the Uses and Abuses of PowerPoint; In This Issue
  • Articles
    • Paz Andrés Sáenz de Santa María, The European Union and the Law of Treaties: A Fruitful Relationship
    • Vera Shikhelman, Implementing Decisions of International Human Rights Institutions – Evidence from the United Nations Human Rights Committee
    • Máximo Langer & Mackenzie Eason, The Quiet Expansion of Universal Jurisdiction
  • Symposium: International Commissions of Inquiry
    • Michael A. Becker & Sarah M.H. Nouwen, International Commissions of Inquiry: What Difference Do They Make? Taking an Empirical Approach
    • Eliav Lieblich, At Least Something: The UN Special Committee on the Problem of Hungary, 1957–1958
    • Hala Khoury-Bisharat, The Unintended Consequences of the Goldstone Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights Organizations in Israel
    • Mohamed S. Helal, Two Seas Apart: An Account of the Establishment, Operation and Impact of the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI)
  • Roaming Charges: Moments of Dignity: Mekong River
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Jeffrey Kahn, The Relationship between the European Court of Human Rights and the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation: Conflicting Conceptions of Sovereignty in Strasbourg and St. Petersburg
    • A. Blankenagel, The Relationship between the European Court of Human Rights and the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation: A Reply to Jeffrey Kahn
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Heike Krieger, Populist Governments and International Law
    • Marcela Prieto Rudolphy, Populist Governments and International Law: A Reply to Heike Krieger
    • Paul Blokker, Populist Governments and International Law: A Reply to Heike Krieger
  • A Fresh Look at an Old Case
    • Amedeo Arena, From an Unpaid Electricity Bill to the Primacy of EU Law: Gian Galeazzo Stendardi and the Making of Costa v ENEL
  • Review Essay
    • JHHW, FIFA – The Beautiful Game – The Ugly Organization
    • Sahiba Gill, Edouard Adelus and Francisco de Abreu Duarte, Whose Game? FIFA, Corruption, and the Challenge of Global Governance. Review of J. Sugden and A. Tomlinson. Football, Corruption and Lies: Revisiting ‘Badfellas’, the Book FIFA Tried to Ban; D. Conn. The Fall of the House of FIFA: The Multimillion-Dollar Corruption at the Heart of Global Soccer; H. Blake and J. Calvert. The Ugly Game: The Corruption of FIFA and the Qatari Plot to Buy the World Cup; B. Mersiades. Whatever It Takes: The Inside Story of the FIFA Way; J. Chade. Política, Propina e Futebol: Como o Padrão FIFA Ameaça o Esporte Mais Popular do Planeta
  • Book Reviews
    • Roger O’Keefe, reviewing William A. Schabas, The Trial of the Kaiser
    • Anna Chadwick, reviewing Honor Brabazon (ed.). Neoliberal Legality: Understanding the Role of Law in the Neoliberal Project
    • Richard Gardiner, reviewing Joseph Klingler, Yuri Parkhomenko, Constantinos Salonidis (eds). Between the Lines of the Vienna Convention? Canons and Other Principles of Interpretation in Public International Law
  • The Last Page
    • Antjie Krog, Litany

Friday, September 13, 2019

Call for Submissions: EJIL Symposium on "Inequalities in International Law"

The European Journal of International Law has issued a call for submissions for a symposium on "Inequalities in International Law." The deadline for abstracts is November 1, 2019. Here's the call:

CALL FOR PAPERS: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

Inequalities in International Law: The EJIL Symposium 2021

International law in the UN Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and other foundational treaties and conventions of the multilateral system entails a premise (and promise) of equal rights, the right to self-determination, and the fundamental equality of human beings. However, during the last 10 years and in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis inequality has once again moved to the centre of attention of a number of disciplines, most noteworthy perhaps economics, as well as politics.

We issue this Call for Papers to invite submissions reflecting on the ways that international law – its practice and scholarship – relates to inequality. We chose the plural – inequalities – as we do not intend, from the outset, to narrow the Symposium’s scope to particular forms or actualizations of inequality. Inequalities span access to, or enjoyment of, public resources, and/or state duties to ensure equalities of opportunity regardless of gender, religion, nationality, birth, political or other ideological convictions, status, among others. While the discussion on inequality and international law has been historically concerned with North/South disparities and the quest for equal distribution among states, recent decades have seen a rise in inequality within countries in affluent and weaker economies. Other characteristics of inequality today include the extreme concentration of income at the top and the shrinkage of the middle class in advanced economies. Inequalities persist also in the external relationships of states with other actors (state and non-state) in the international system – as enduring legacies of colonialism in economic development and in post-conflict peacebuilding; as ongoing asymmetries in the efforts to achieve accountability and international justice for victims of internationally wrongful acts; as well as through contested modes of governance over the world’s environment, global commons, and natural resources.

The interplay between international law and inequality and the special trends related to inequality today invite further research and reflection. Developments such as the rising inequality within countries, the possible decline in inter-country inequality alongside economic growth in emerging market and developing economies challenge our existing legal framing and approaches to the problem of inequality and call for further analysis of the relationship between these trends and international legal principles, doctrines and institutions.

Thus, we invite contributions that conceptualize and problematize the notion of inequality and that examine its doctrinal significance and its usefulness and appropriateness as an analytical concept or as a common concern in international law. We further call for papers that address questions regarding empirical, quantitative and qualitative assessments of inequality within and across societies and states and that assess international law and institutions as cause as well as remedy to inequality. We welcome doctrinal, historiographical, genealogical and sociological engagements with past and present regimes, initiatives, institutions, and instruments and their relationship with inequality as well as biographical engagements with scholars and practitioners who in their work paid particular attention to the question of inequality in international law.

Finally, we welcome engagements with our responsibility as international lawyers. How do we practise international law ethically in light of persisting material inequality, racism and sexism in the world, in our societies, governments and workplaces. What visions or utopias might guide and invigorate our practices? To what extent can we identify persistent inequalities that also suffuse the ‘invisible college’ of international lawyers, and what can be done within international law from both academic inquiry and norms of professional practice?

The call is not restricted to a particular subfield of international law. We would be happy to receive proposals from all fields of international law, including the following themes:

Human Rights: Papers may interrogate the capacity of (social and economic) rights to remedy inequality, or engage with the thesis that (particular conceptions of) human rights detract from social justice concerns.

International Economic Law: Papers may address the question whether international economic law should and how it might allow for global redistribution or contribute to a transformation of political economy that reduces material inequality instead of enhancing it. Further clarification is needed how international economic law (together with transnational and national law) furthers the accumulation of wealth and capital as well as the concentration of corporate power. Contributions may assess calls for a new NIEO or a new Bretton Woods and evaluate them in light of historical experience and in the context of present geopolitical developments. Contributions may also confront the changing face of international economic law – particularly its deepening intersections with human rights law, international environmental law, climate law, among others – and assess how the international economic system engages, perpetuates, or redresses both latent and patent inequalities faced by individuals, groups, peoples, small nations such as low-lying island states, among others.

Sustainable Development Goals: 10 years to go until, by 2030, the SDGs shall be achieved, it may be a good time for an evaluation of their impact so far – not only as concerns the realization of targets, in particular of SDG 10 “Reduced Inequalities” – but also the effects of this governance framework on international law doctrine and the practice of governmental and non-governmental institutions. Can the polycentric approach to SDG governance truly address inequalities, when SDGs are articulated in the grey areas between hard law and soft law?

Migration Law: Given that extreme poverty and global inequality in living conditions are major reasons for global migration, does migration law adequately take account of these causes? Current government policies of exclusion and deterrence not only raise questions as to their conformity with international law, but call into doubt foundational normative justifications of global and national political order. Are instruments such as the Global Compact on Migration and the New York Declaration sufficient to eventually harden into multilateral or regional treaties recognizing shared norms in addressing both protections for migrants as well as the pressures on and opportunities open for receiving populations?

Climate Law: From its inception climate change law has had and still has to come to terms with various inequalities – including inequalities as concerns individual states’ contributions to climate change as well as inequalities as to how communities will be affected by climate change. How does climate law address these inequalities; how should it address them in order not only to effectively contain climate change, but to do so in an equitable manner?

After ‘After Hegemony’: The emergence of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (the BRICS) as a new hub of power in international relations, destabilizing processes in Europe, most evident in Brexit, and the decline of the US as the world's hegemonic power have triggered new approaches to international law making in recent years. These new approaches include a shift away from multilateralism toward bilateralism, regionalism and other forms of global governance. These processes are related to inequality in their cause and effects: Can we tie the growing unrest over inequality among different political groups worldwide to the turn away from existing international legal institutions? How are these ideological sensibilities and new forms of mobilization related to new modalities of international regulation? How will these new modalities influence global inequality in the future?

We are issuing here a Call for Papers. International lawyers from practice and academia as well as scholars from related disciplines are invited to send an abstract of 500 words. Abstracts should not only set out the prospective papers for inclusion in the symposium; they should also concisely formulate the questions addressed as well as the method and materials employed in the proposed research. We will accept proposals for research papers of 10-12K words as well as shorter Think Pieces of 5-7K words.

The deadline for the abstracts is 1 November 2019. Draft papers of those abstracts selected by a committee composed of members of the Editorial Boards of EJIL will be expected by 29 May 2020. We are considering a workshop in June 2020, at a location to be determined, to discuss the drafts. Funding towards the travel expenses of some participants may be available. Final drafts will be expected by 2 November 2020.

Abstracts, accompanied by a recent CV in pdf format, are to be sent to EJIL’s Managing Editor at anny.bremner {at} eui(.)eu by 1 November 2019.

Friday, July 26, 2019

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 30, no. 2, May 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Editor-in-Chief Sarah M. H. Nouwen; Best Practice – Writing a Peer-Review Report; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Michal Ovádek & Ines Willemyns, International Law of Customs Unions: Conceptual Variety, Legal Ambiguity and Diverse Practice
    • Miles Jackson, State Instigation in International Law: A General Principle Transposed
    • Paolo Amorosa, Pioneering International Women’s Rights? The US National Woman’s Party and the 1933 Montevideo Equal Rights Treaties
  • ‘Hospital Shields’ and International Humanitarian Law – An Exchange
    • Neve Gordon & Nicola Perugini, ‘Hospital Shields‘ and the Limits of International Law
    • Yishai Beer, Save the Injured – Don’t Kill IHL: Rejecting Absolute Immunity for ‘Shielding Hospitals’
  • Those who Teach and Those who Learn: International Law as an Academic Discipline
    • Ryan Scoville & Mark Berlin, Who Studies International Law? Explaining Cross-national Variation in Compulsory International Legal Education
    • Sondre Torp Helmersen, Finding ‘the Most Highly Qualified Publicists’: Lessons from the International Court of Justice
  • Roaming Charges: Do Not Discard
  • Symposium: International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons
    • Isabel Feichtner & Surabhi Ranganathan, International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons: Introduction
    • Matt Craven, ‘Other Spaces’: Constructing the Legal Architecture of a Cold War Commons and the Scientific-Technical Imaginary of Outer Space
    • Surabhi Ranganathan, Ocean Floor Grab: International Law and the Making of an Extractive Imaginary
    • Isabel Feichtner, Sharing the Riches of the Sea: The Redistributive and Fiscal Dimension of Deep Seabed Exploitation
    • Karin Mickelson, Common Heritage of Mankind as a Limit to Exploitation of the Global Commons
  • Critical Review of Jurisprudence
    • Cosette D. Creamer & Zuzanna Godzimirska, Trust in the Court: The Role of the Registry of the European Court of Human Rights
  • Book Reviews
    • Martins Paparinskis, reviewing Charles T. Kotuby Jr & Luke A. Sobota, General Principles of Law and International Due Process: Principles and Norms Applicable in Transnational Disputes
    • Ole Kristian Fauchald, reviewing Mihir Kanade, The Multilateral Trading System and Human Rights: A Governance Space Theory on Linkages
    • Volker Roeben, reviewing Mathias Forteau & Jean-Marc Thouvenin eds., Traité de droit international de la mer
  • The Last Page
    • Friedrich Schiller, An die Freude/Hymn to Joy

Sunday, May 26, 2019

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 30, no. 1, February 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, EJIL at 30; The EU – A Community of Fate, at Last; Vital Statistics; In this Issue; The Birth of EJIL
  • The EJIL Foreword
    • Martti Koskenniemi, Imagining the Rule of Law: Rereading the Grotian ‘Tradition’
  • Articles
    • Valentina Vadi, Perspective and Scale in the Architecture of International Legal History
    • Hannah Woolaver, From Joining to Leaving: Domestic Law’s Role in the International Legal Validity of Treaty Withdrawal
    • Claire E M Jervis, Jurisdictional Immunities Revisited: An Analysis of the Procedure Substance Distinction in International Law
  • The Theatre of International Law: An Occasional Series
    • Lorenzo Gradoni & Luca Pasquet, Dialogue Concerning Legal Un-certainty and Other Prodigies
  • The European Traditional in International Law
    • Tilmann Altwicker, International Law in the Best of All Possible Worlds: An Introduction to G.W. Leibniz’s Theory of International Law
  • Roaming Charges: Moments of History: 1989
  • Symposium: Regional Organization and Regional Integration
    • Damian Chalmers, Regional Organizations and the Reintegrating of International Law
    • Damian Chalmers & Julia Slupska, The Regional Remaking of Trade and Investment Law
    • Davor Jancic, Regional Parliaments and African Economic Integration
    • Päivi Johanna Neuvonen, Transforming Membership? Citizenship, Identity and the Problem of Belonging in Regional Integration Organizations
    • Floris de Witte, Integrating the Subject: Narratives of Emancipation in Regionalism
  • Critical Review of Jurisprudence
    • Petros C Mavroidis, Last Mile for Tuna (to a Safe Harbour): What Is the TBT Agreement All About?
  • Review Essays
    • Lauri Mälksoo, The Annexation of Crimea and Balance of Power in International Law
    • Eliav Lieblich, The Facilitative Function of Jus in Bello
  • Book Reviews
    • David Schneiderman, reviewing Jonathan Bonnitcha, Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen and Michael Waibel, The Political Economy of the Investment Treaty Regime
    • Samantha Besson, reviewing José E. Alvarez, The Impact of International Organizations on International Law
    • Jacob Katz Cogan, reviewing Juan Pablo Scarfi, The Hidden History of International Law in the Americas: Empire and Legal Networks
  • The Last Page
    • The Quality of Portia

Saturday, February 16, 2019

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 29, no. 4, November 2018) is out. Contents include:
  • Article
    • Otto Dix, βtruppen gehen unter Gas vor, 1924
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, The European Dream Team; Nine Good Reads and One Viewing; EJIL Roll of Honour; In This Issue
  • Honouring Raphael Lemkin: The 70th Anniversary of the Genocide Convention
    • Johann Justus Vasel, ‘In the Beginning, There Was No Word . . .’
  • ESIL Keynote Address
    • Jan Klabbers, On Epistemic Universalism and the Melancholy of International Law
  • Afterword: Eyal Benvenisti and His Critics
    • Lorenzo Casini, Googling Democracy? New Technologies and the Law of Global Governance: Afterword to Eyal Benvenisti’s Foreword
    • Lorna McGregor, Accountability for Governance Choices in Artificial Intelligence: Afterword to Eyal Benvenisti’s Foreword
    • Eyal Benvenisti, Toward Algorithmic Checks and Balances: A Rejoinder
  • New Voices: A Selection from the Sixth Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law
    • Veronika Fikfak, Changing State Behaviour: Damages before the European Court of Human Rights
    • An Hertogen, The Persuasiveness of Domestic Law Analogies in International Law
    • Ntina Tzouvala, ‘These Ancient Arenas of Racial Struggles’: International Law and the Balkans, 1878–1949
    • Daria Davitti, Biopolitical Borders and the State of Exception in the European Migration ‘Crisis’
    • Geoff Gordon, Imperial Standard Time
  • ESIL Young Scholar Prize
    • Joshua Paine, International Adjudication as a Global Public Good?
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Anne Peters, Corruption as a Violation of International Human Rights
    • Kevin E Davis, Corruption as a Violation of International Human Rights: A Reply to Anne Peters
    • Franco Peirone, Corruption as a Violation of International Human Rights: A Reply to Anne Peters
  • Symposium: International Law and the First World War
    • For All We Have and Are (1914)
    • Thomas Graditzky, The Law of Military Occupation from the 1907 Hague Peace Conference to the Outbreak of World War II: Was Further Codification Unnecessary or Impossible?
    • Neville Wylie & Lindsey Cameron, The Impact of World War I on the Law Governing the Treatment of Prisoners of War and the Making of a Humanitarian Subject
    • The Parable of the Old Man and the Young
  • Roaming Charges: Moments of Dignity: Death
  • Critical Review of Governance
    • Björnstjern Baade, Fake News and International Law
    • ‘68 Retrospective and Prospective
    • Deborah Whitehall, The International Prospects of the Soixante-Huitard
  • Review Essay
    • Paolo Palchetti, Unique, Special, or Simply a Primus Inter Pares? The European Union in International Law
  • Book Reviews
    • Felix Lange, reviewing Samuel Moyn, Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World
    • Diane A Desierto, reviewing Oisin Suttle, Distributive Justice and World Trade Law: A Political Theory of International Trade Regulation
    • Marko Milanovic, reviewing Diane Orentlicher, Some Kind of Justice: The ICTY’s Impact in Bosnia and Serbia
    • Dana Burchardt, reviewing Jean d’Aspremont, International Law as a Belief System
    • James G Devaney, reviewing Katharina Diel-Gligor, Towards Consistency in International Investment Jurisprudence: A Preliminary Ruling System for ICSID Arbitration
  • The Last Page
    • Raphael Lemkin, Genocide

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Call for Submissions: International Law and Democracy Revisited – The EJIL 30th Anniversary Symposium

The European Journal of International Law has issued a call for submissions for its 30th Anniversary Symposium on the subject of "International Law and Democracy Revisited." Here's the call:

EJIL was founded in 1989, coinciding with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the attendant excitement encapsulated by that well-known optimistic/hubristic End of History phraseology, with predictions of liberal democracy to become regnant in the world and a New International Legal Order to replace the old First World-Second World-Third World distinctions.

Thirty years later the state of democracy, whether liberal or social or any other variant, seems to be far from sanguine.

Here is but a partial list of the challenges to democracy in the contemporary world:

  • The advent of so-called ‘illiberal democracies’
  • The crisis and breakdown of trust within established democracies
  • The reality or otherwise of states with ‘formal democracy’ often reduced to little more than elections, more or less free
  • The accountability and rule of law concerns, famously termed GAL concerns, which transnational governance regimes raise as indispensable features of democracy
  • The persistent ‘democracy deficit’ or ‘political deficit’ of the European Union and similar Organizations
  • The emergence of the global ‘data economy’ with mega platforms calling into question basic assumptions about territory and jurisdiction and calling into question the ability of democratic regimes to reign in such platforms increasingly questioned
  • The impact of both financial markets and international monetary bodies on the internal margin of manoeuvre and democratic choices of economic management
  • Democracy and global inequality: The relationship between counter-democratic ideologies, legal reforms and political processes at the domestic and global levels and social and economic processes such as the shrinking middle class and the lasting ramifications of the 2008 economic crisis.

The list of challenges could go on quite a bit. The international legal order itself has come under stress and the interaction, descriptively and prescriptively, of international law with the question of ‘democracy’ has become complex, even messy.

We are issuing here a Call for Papers. International lawyers from practice and academia as well as scholars from related disciplines are invited to send an abstract of 350-500 words setting out the prospective papers they would like to submit for inclusion in the symposium dealing with any theme that comes within the overarching topic of International Law and Democracy. We will accept proposals for research papers of 10-12K words as well as shorter Think Pieces of 5-7K words.

The deadline for the Abstracts is 15 January 2019. Draft papers of those abstracts selected by a committee composed of members of the Editorial Boards of EJIL will be expected by 15 June. We are considering a workshop in Madrid in early July to discuss the drafts. Final version of papers will be expected by 15 September.

Abstracts are to be sent to EJIL’s Managing Editor at anny.bremner {at} eui(.)eu by 15 January 2019.

Monday, November 12, 2018

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 29, no. 3, August 2018) is out. This is a special issue on "Perpetrators and Victims of War." Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Publish and Perish: A Plea to Deans, Faculty Chairpersons, University Authorities; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Sofia Stolk, A sophisticated beast? On the construction of an ‘ideal’ perpetrator in the opening statements of international criminal trials
    • Christine Schwöbel-Patel, The ‘Ideal Victim of International Criminal Law
    • Line Gissel, A Different Kind of Court: Africa’s Support for the International Criminal Court, 1993-2003
    • Alexandra Adams, The Legacy of the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda and its Contribution to the Definition of Rape
  • Symposium: International Law and the First World War - International Law and the End of War
    • Randall Lesaffer, Aggression before Versailles
    • Markus M. Payk, ‘What We Seek is the Reign of Law’: The Legalism of the Paris Peace Settlement after the Great War
  • Roaming Charges
    • Roaming Charges: The Crucifixion – Do It Yourself
  • Symposium: The Crime of Aggression before the International Criminal Court
    • Dapo Akande & Antonios Tzanakopoulos, The Crime of Aggression before the International Criminal Court: Introduction to the Symposium
    • Frédéric Mégret, International Criminal Justice as a Peace Project
    • Tom Dannenbaum, The Criminalization of Aggression and Soldiers’ Rights
    • Tom Ruys, Criminalizing Aggression: How the Future of the Law on the Use of Force Rests in the Hands of the ICC
    • Marieke de Hoon, The Crime of Aggression’s Show Trial Catch-22
    • Dapo Akande & Antonios Tzanakopoulos, Treaty Law and ICC Jurisdiction Over the Crime of Aggression
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Rosa Freedman, UNaccountable: A New Approach to Peacekeepers and Sexual Abuse
    • Devika Hovell, UNaccountable: A Reply to Rosa Freedman
    • Rosa Freedman, UNaccountable: A Rejoinder to Devika Hovell
  • Review Essay
    • Gleider Hernández, E Pluribus Unum? A Divisible College? Reflections on the International Legal Profession. Review of Anthea Roberts, Is International Law International?
  • Book Reviews
    • Louise Arimatsu, reviewing Dianne Otto (ed.), Queering International Law: Possibilities, Alliances, Complicities, Risks
    • María-Teresa Gil-Bazo, reviewing Violeta Moreno-Lax, Accessing Asylum in Europe: Extraterritorial Border Controls and Refugee Rights under EU Law
    • Velimir Živković reviewing Mavluda Sattorova, The Impact of Investment Treaty Law on Host States: Enabling Good Governance?
  • Briefly Noted
    • Jörg Fisch, reviewing Stefan Kadelbach, Thomas Kleinlein, and David Roth-Isigkeit (ed.). System, Order, and International Law. The Early History of International Legal Thought from Machiavelli to Hegel
  • The Last Page
    • The Quality of Mercy, Portia, in William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act 4, Scene 1

Saturday, August 11, 2018

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 29, no. 2, May 2018) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Black Lies, White Lies and Some Uncomfortable Truths in and of the International Trading System; Authors of EJIL – Customer Care; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Itamar Mann, Maritime Legal Black Holes: Migration and Rightlessness in International Law
    • Leora Bilsky & Rachel Klagsbrun, The Return of Cultural Genocide?
    • David Kosař & Jan Petrov, Determinants of Compliance Difficulties among ‘Good Compliers’: Implementation of International Human Rights Rulings in the Czech Republic
    • Devika Hovell, The Authority of Universal Jurisdiction
  • Symposium: International Law and the First World War: Belligerency and Neutrality
    • Stephen C Neff, Disrupting a Delicate Balance: The Allied Blockade Policy and the Law of Maritime Neutrality during the Great War
    • Andrew J Norris, Uninvited and Unwelcome: The SS Appam and the US Law of Neutrality
  • Roaming Charges
    • Roaming Charges: Moments of History
  • Focus: Investment Arbitration
    • Gus Van Harten, Leaders in the Expansive and Restrictive Interpretation of Investment Treaties: A Descriptive Study of ISDS Awards to 2010
    • Malcolm Langford & Daniel Behn, Managing Backlash: The Evolving Investment Treaty Arbitrator?
  • Focus: Geography of Human Rights
    • Tilmann Altwicker, Transnationalizing Rights: International Human Rights Law in Cross-Border Contexts
    • Barbara Oomen & Moritz Baumgärtel, Frontier Cities: The Rise of Local Authorities as an Opportunity for International Human Rights Law
  • Review Essay
    • Akbar Rasulov, A Marxism for International Law: A New Agenda
  • Book Reviews
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, reviewing Benjamin Allen Coates, Legalist Empire: International Law and American Foreign Relations in the Early Twentieth Century
    • Monica Hakimi, reviewing Ian Hurd, How to Do Things with International Law
    • Jan Klabbers, reviewing Michael Ignatieff, The Ordinary Virtues: Moral Order in a Divided World
  • The Last Page
    • Ela Kotkowska, A Migrant Song

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 29, no. 1, February 2018) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • A Court that Dare Not Speak its Name: Human Rights at the Court of Justice; Vital Statistics; Time for Change: With Thanks to Guy Fiti Sinclair; In this Issue
  • The EJIL Foreword
    • Eyal Benvenisti, Upholding Democracy amid the Challenges of New Technology: What Role for the Law of Global Governance?
  • Articles
    • Wolfgang Alschner & Damien Charlotin, The Growing Complexity of the International Court of Justice’s Self-Citation Network
    • Hendrik Simon, The Myth of Liberum Ius ad Bellum– Forgotten Disputes about Justifying War in 19th Century International Legal Discourse
    • Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral, A Short History of International Law Journals (1869–2017)
  • Focus: International Economic Law
    • Sungjoon Cho & Jürgen Kurtz, Convergence and Divergence in International Economic Law and Politics
    • Christopher Vajda, The EU and Beyond: Dispute Resolution in International Economic Agreements
  • Roaming Charges
    • Roaming Charges: Manila: More than One Way to Heaven
  • Symposium: International Law and the First World War - International Law before 1914 and the Outbreak of War
    • Gabriela Frei, International Law and the First World War: Introduction
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, Violence and International Law before 1914: On Imperial Ordering and the Ontology of the Nation State
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Alan Desmond, The Private Life of Family Matters: Curtailing Human Rights Protection for Migrants under Article 8 ECHR?
  • Review Essay
    • Charlotte Peevers, Liberal Internationalism, Radical Transformation and the Making of World Orders. Review of Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro, The Internationalists: How a Radical Plan to Outlaw War Remade the World
  • Book Reviews
    • Jan Klabbers, reviewing Manfred Nowak, Human Rights or Global Capitalism: The Limits of Privatization
    • Alina Miron, reviewing Nathalie Clarenc, La suspension des engagements internationaux
    • Paolo Palchetti, reviewing Florian Couveinhes Matsumoto and Raphaëlle Nollez-Goldbach eds., Les motifs non-juridiques des jugements internationaux
    • Wolfgang Münch, reviewing Joachim Müller ed., Reforming the United Nations: A Chronology
  • The Last Page
    • Stephen Haven, Monolith

Friday, February 16, 2018

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 4, November 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Je Suis Achbita!; The Trump Jerusalem Declaration and the Rule of Unintended Consequences; 10 Good Reads; A propos Book Reviewing; EJIL Roll of Honour; In This Issue
  • Articles
    • Catherine O’Rourke, Feminist Strategy in International Law: Understanding Its Legal, Normative and Political Dimensions
    • Anthony Reeves, Liability to International Prosecution: The Nature of Universal Jurisdiction
  • Focus: Responsibility
    • Luke Glanville, The Responsibility to Protect beyond Borders in the Law of Nature and Nations
    • Sandesh Sivakumaran, Extrapolation, Analogy, and Form: the Emergence of an International Law of Disaster Relief
    • Jan Klabbers, Reflections on Role Responsibility: The Responsibility of International Organisations for Failing to Act
  • New Voices: A Selection from the Fifth Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law
    • Neha Jain, Radical Dissents in International Criminal Trials
    • Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne, Rights under International Humanitarian Law
    • Cheah W.L., The Curious Case of Singapore’s BIA Desertion Trials: War Crimes, Projects of Empire, and the Rule of Law
  • Afterword: Laurence Boisson de Chazournes and Her Critics
    • Yuval Shany, Plurality as a Form of (Mis)management of International Dispute Settlement: Afterword to Laurence Boisson de Chazournes’ Foreword
    • Thomas Streinz, Winners and Losers of the Plurality of International Courts and Tribunals: Afterword to Laurence Boisson de Chazournes’ Foreword
    • Veronika Bilkova, The Threads (or Threats?) of a Managerial Approach: Afterword to Laurence Boisson de Chazournes’ Foreword
    • Sergio Puig, Experimentalism, Destabilization, and Control in International Law: Afterword to Laurence Boisson de Chazournes’ Foreword
    • Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, Plurality in the Fabric of International Courts and Tribunals: The Threads of a Managerial Approach – Fears and Anxieties: A Rejoinder
  • Roaming Charges
    • Moments of Dignity: Ash Wednesday, Bogotà Colombia
  • Experimental International Law - EJIL: Debate!
    • Yahli Shereshevsky & Tom Noah, Does Exposure to Preparatory Work Affect Treaty Interpretation? An Experimental Study on International Law Students and Experts
    • Jeffrey L. Dunoff & Mark A. Pollack, Experimenting with International Law: A Reader’s Guide
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Rebecca Schmidt, Protecting the Environment through Sports? Public-Private Cooperation for Regulatory Resources and International Law
  • Impressions
    • Onuma Yasuaki, Reading the Book that Makes One a Scholar
  • Review Essay
    • Julia Dehm, Authorizing Appropriation?: Law in Contested Forested Spaces
  • Literature Review
    • Christina Binder & Jane A. Hofbauer, Teaching International Human Rights Law: A Textbook Review
  • Book Reviews
    • Jacob Katz Cogan, reviewing Guy Fiti Sinclair, To Reform the World: International Organizations and the Making of Modern States
    • Michael A. Becker, reviewing Christian Henderson (ed.), Commissions of Inquiry: Problems and Prospects
    • Hannah Birkenkötter, reviewing Valentin Jeutner, Irresolvable Norm Conflicts in International Law: The Concept of a Legal Dilemma
  • The Last Page
    • Gregory Shaffer, Kathmandu

Monday, November 13, 2017

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 3, August 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Those Who Live in Glass Houses ...; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Andrew D Mitchell & James Munro, Someone Else’s Deal: Interpreting International Investment Agreements in the Light of Third-Party Agreements
    • Gracia Marín Durán, Untangling the International Responsibility of the European Union and Its Member States in the World Trade Organization Post-Lisbon: A Competence/Remedy Model
    • Sergio Puig & Anton Strezhnev, The David Effect and ISDS
  • Focus: Human Rights and the ECHR
    • Merris Amos, The Value of the European Court of Human Rights to the United Kingdom
    • Susana Sanz-Caballero, The Principle of Nulla Poena Sine Lege Revisited: The Retrospective Application of Criminal Law in the Eyes of the European Court of Human Rights
    • Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir, Res Interpretata, Erga Omnes Effect and the Role of the Margin of Appreciation in Giving Domestic Effect to the Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
    • Vera Shikhelman, Geography, Politics and Culture in the United Nations Human Rights Committee
    • Thomas Kleinlein, Consensus and Contestability: The ECtHR and the Combined Potential of European Consensus and Procedural Rationality Control
  • Roaming Charges
    • Emma Nyhan, A Window Apart
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Jonathan Bonnitcha & Robert McCorquodale, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
    • John Gerard Ruggie & John F Sherman, III, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Reply to Jonathan Bonnitcha and Robert McCorquodale
    • Jonathan Bonnitcha & Robert McCorquodale, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Rejoinder to John Gerard Ruggie and John F. Sherman, III
  • A Fresh Look at Old Cases
    • William Phelan, The Revolutionary Doctrines of European Law and the Legal Philosophy of Robert Lecourt
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko, The ICJ and Jus Cogens through the Lens of Feminist Legal Methods

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 2, May 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, On My Way Out – Advice to Young Scholars V: Writing References; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Niels Petersen, The International Court of Justice and the Judicial Politics of Identifying Customary International Law
    • Bernard Hoekman & Petros C. Mavroidis, MFN Clubs and Scheduling Additional Commitments in the GATT: Learning from the GATS
    • Janis Grzybowski, To Be or Not to Be: The Ontological Predicament of State Creation in International Law
    • Noëlle Quénivet, Does and Should International Law Prohibit the Prosecution of Children for War Crimes?
    • Yota Negishi, The Pro Homine Principle’s Role in Regulating the Relationship between Conventionality Control and Constitutionality Control
  • Focus: International Legal Histories – A Look Back to the Twentieth Century
    • Giovanni Mantilla, Conforming Instrumentalists: Why the United States and the United Kingdom Joined the 1949 Geneva Conventions
    • Narrelle Morris & Aden Knaap, When Institutional Design is Flawed: Problems of Cooperation at the United Nations War Crimes Commission, 1943-1948
    • Felix Lange, Between Systematization and Expertise for Foreign Policy: The Practice-Oriented Approach in Germany’s International Legal Scholarship (1920–1980)
  • Roaming Charges
    • Viorica Vita, Selling Love Locks in Rome
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct
    • Ilias Plakokefalos, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: A Reply to Vladyslav Lanovoy
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: Rejoinder
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Moria Paz, The Law of Walls
  • Review Essay
    • Outi Korhonen, Within and Beyond Interdisciplinarity in International Law and Human Rights. Review of Moshe Hirsch, Invitation to the Sociology of International Law and Pamela Slotte and Miia Halme-Tuomisaari (eds), Revisiting the Origins of Human Rights

Monday, April 3, 2017

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 1, February 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, The Case for a Kinder, Gentler Brexit; 10 Good Reads; Vital Statistics; In this Issue
    • Marcelo Kohen, In Memoriam: Vera Gowlland-Debbas
  • The EJIL Foreword
    • Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, Plurality in the Fabric of International Courts and Tribunals: The Threads of a Managerial Approach
  • Articles
    • Florian Grisel, Treaty-Making between Public Authority and Private Interests: The Genealogy of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
    • Nahuel Maisley, The International Right of Rights? Article 25(a) of the ICCPR as a Human Right to Take Part in International Law-Making
    • Armin von Bogdandy, Matthias Goldmann, & Ingo Venzke, From Public International to International Public Law: Translating World Public Opinion into International Public Authority
    • Natalie Davidson, Shifting the Lenses on Alien Tort Statute Litigation: Narrating US Hegemony in Filártiga and Marcos
    • Alejandro Chehtman, The ad bellum Challenge of Drones: Recalibrating Permissible Use of Force
  • Roaming Charges: Places of Solitude
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Liam Murphy, Law Beyond the State: Some Philosophical Questions
    • Samantha Besson, Law Beyond the State: A Reply to Liam Murphy
    • Nehal Bhuta, Law Beyond the State: A Reply to Liam Murphy
    • Christoph Möllers, Law Beyond the State: A Reply to Liam Murphy
    • Jochen von Bernstorff, Law Beyond the State: A Reply to Liam Murphy
    • Liam Murphy, Law Beyond the State: A Rejoinder
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Michelle Zang, Shall We Talk: Judicial Communication between the CJEU and WTO Dispute Settlement
  • Review Essay
    • Thomas Kleinlein, Jus Cogens Re-examined: Value Formalism in International Law
  • EJIL Editors’ Choice of Books 2016
    • André Nollkaemper, Jan Klabbers & Jean d’Aspremont