Sunday, October 6, 2024

New Issue: Ethics & International Affairs

The latest issue of Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 38, no. 1, Spring 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Roundtable: Ethics and the War against Ukraine
    • Christian Nikolaus Braun, Introduction: Ethics and the War against Ukraine
    • Neil Renic, The Cost of Atrocity: Strategic Implications of Russian Battlefield Misconduct in Ukraine
    • James Pattison, Ukraine, Wagner, and Russia's Convict-Soldiers
    • Sophia Anastazievsky, What We Owe to Ukrainians: A Moral Perspective on Nuclear Coercion and Military Intervention
    • Christian Enemark, Returning the War to Russia: Drones and Discrimination in the Defense of Ukraine
    • Lonneke Peperkamp, Technology and the Civilianization of Warfare
  • Features
    • Eglantine Staunton & Cecilia Jacob, A Responsibility to Support Civilian Resistance Movements? Broadening the Scope of Nonviolent Atrocity Prevention
    • J. S. Maloy, Beyond Crisis and Emergency: Climate Change as a Political Epic

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Yilmazcan: Improving Procedural Justice in Anti-Dumping Investigations: Lessons from the US and EU Practices Against China

Abdulkadir Yilmazcan
has published Improving Procedural Justice in Anti-Dumping Investigations: Lessons from the US and EU Practices Against China (Cambridge Univ. Press 2024). Here's the abstract:
By synthesizing both theoretical and empirical insights, this book offers a distinctive perspective on procedural justice within the context of anti-dumping investigations. The book highlights the disjunction between the provisions outlined in the World Trade Organization's Anti-Dumping Agreement (ADA) and the practical encounters faced by stakeholders such as exporters, regulatory bodies, and legal experts affiliated with the WTO. Employing a mixed-method approach, the research encompasses a comprehensive doctrinal analysis of procedural complexities alongside empirical investigations involving key stakeholders such as WTO legal experts, Chinese exporters, and investigating authorities. Furthermore, this book underscores the potential for enhancing procedural justice through either a comprehensive reform of the ADA or concrete measures such as a standardized anti-dumping questionnaire. Such improvements offered in the book have the potential to curtail the misuse of anti-dumping investigations, consequently mitigating a substantial number of disputes that might be brought before the WTO's Dispute Settlement Mechanism.

Friday, October 4, 2024

New Issue: Questions of International Law

The latest issue of Questions of International Law / Questioni di Diritto Internazionale (no. 107, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • What can international justice do to stop the war? An editorial and a question
    • Introduced by Maurizio Arcari and Beatrice Bonafé
    • Jeffrey L. Dunoff, International justice cannot stop the war. What can?
    • Anne Lagerwall, Can international justice fight the fait accompli of wars?
    • Pierre D'Argent, International Law as a System of Claims

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Call for Submissions: Irish Yearbook of International Law

The Irish Yearbook of International Law has issued a call for submissions. Here's the call:

Call for Submissions

1 - Call for Papers

The Editors of the Irish Yearbook of International Law invite submissions on any area of public or private international law for publication as an article in the Yearbook. Submissions are normally 10,000 to 12,000 words in length, although longer pieces will be considered. Submissions, comprising a brief 100-word abstract, article referenced in OSCOLA style, and confirmation of exclusive submission, should be sent to James Gallen (james.gallen@dcu.ie) by 31 October 2024.

2 - IYBIL Student Prize The IYBIL Student Prize will be awarded to the best submission written by an individual enrolled in a degree programme at the time of submission. The winner will receive a book prize generously sponsored by Hart Publishing, and their article will be published in the next edition of the Yearbook. Please submit your paper as per the call for papers above, indicating if you would like to be considered for the IYBIL Student Prize.

3 - Book reviews

The Editors are happy to consider books written by authors from anywhere in the world and on any topic loosely within the theme of International Law. This is a great opportunity for Early Career Researchers in particular to learn about the publishing process. If the Editors agree to publish a review, they will arrange for a free book to be sent to the reviewer. Potential reviewers should get in touch with Bríd Ní Ghráinne (brid.nighrainne@mu.ie) with the name of the book they would like to review by 31 October 2024.

New Issue: Harvard International Law Journal

The latest issue of the Harvard International Law Journal (Vol. 65, no. 1, Winter 2023) is out. Contents include:
  • Yuji Iwasawa, Various Means of Enforcement in International Law
  • Kathleen Claussen, Trade Policing
  • Naz Khatoon Modizadeh,"Let Us All Agree to Die a Littke": TWAIL's Unfulfilled Promise
  • Weijia Rao, Large Corporations and Investor-State Arbitration
  • Gregory H. Fox & Noah B. Novogrodsky, Of Looting, Land, and Loss: The New International Law of Takings

Sunday, September 29, 2024

McDermott: Proving International Crimes

Yvonne McDermott (Swansea Univ. - Law) has published Proving International Crimes (Oxford Univ. Press 2024). Here's the abstract:

Proving International Crimes elucidates how international criminal tribunals have tackled the immense and complex task of proving international crimes such as genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. The challenges posed by the scale and scope of these crimes and the distance in time and space between their commission and their prosecution are well-known. Nevertheless, investigators, lawyers, scholars, and policy makers often look to the law and practice of international criminal tribunals to establish what standards need to be met in the collection, preservation, presentation, and analysis of evidence to prove international crimes. In offering a comprehensive account of the law and practice of evidence before international criminal courts and tribunals to date, as well as recommendations for future practice, this book aims to inform domestic, regional, and international accountability processes for crimes going forward.

This book demonstrates that, owing to the flexibility built in to the legal and procedural frameworks of international criminal courts and tribunals, the law of international criminal evidence is often unpredictable and uncertain. To this end, McDermott argues for the development of a coherent epistemic framework driven by two guiding principles: rectitude of decision and the highest standards of fairness.

Saturday, September 28, 2024

New Issue: Transnational Environmental Law

The latest issue of Transnational Environmental Law (Vol. 13, no. 2, July 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Thijs Etty, Josephine van Zeben, Harro van Asselt, Leslie-Anne Duvic-Paoli, Sébastien Jodoin, & Leonie Reins, The Complexity of Transnational Environmental Law
  • Articles
    • Valentin Schatz, Assessing Drifting Fish Aggregating Device (dFAD) Abandonment under International Marine Pollution Law
    • Birsha Ohdedar, Law, Colonial-Capitalist Floods, and the Production of Injustices in Eastern India: Insights for Climate Adaptation
    • Joris van Laarhoven & Rens Claerhoudt, A New Leaf: Is It Time to De-objectify Plants in Private Law?
    • Manolis Kotzampasakis & Edwin Woerdman, The Legal Objectives of the EU Emissions Trading System: An Evaluation Framework
    • Xiaohan Gong, Rainer Quitzow, & Anatole Boute, Developing China's Hydrogen Economy: National Regulation Through Local Experimentation
    • Aarti Gupta, Frank Biermann, Ellinore van Driel, Nadia Bernaz, Dhanasree Jayaram, Rakhyun E. Kim, Louis J. Kotzé, Dana Ruddigkeit, Stacy D. VanDeveer, & Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh, Towards a Non-Use Regime on Solar Geoengineering: Lessons from International Law and Governance
    • Niamh Guiry, Why Do States Adhere to the Sustainable Development Goals?
    • Violet Ross & Lucila de Almeida, Refining Reflexive Environmental Law by Nature and Nurture: Autonomy, Accountability, and Adjustability

Conference: Standards of Conduct and Accountability in Military Activities, the Role of Military Law and International Humanitarian Law, and the Importance of Preventing Armed Conflicts

On Decmeber 10-13, 2024, the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War will hold a conference on "Standards of Conduct and Accountability in Military Activities, the Role of Military Law and International Humanitarian Law, and the Importance of Preventing Armed Conflicts," in Abu Dhabi. The invitation is here; the program is here; and the application is here.

Call for Papers: ANZSIL International Economic Law Interest Group Workshop

The Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law's International Economic Law Interest Group has issued a call for papers for its 2024 workshop, to be held via Zoom on November 29. The call is here.

Friday, September 27, 2024

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 37, no. 3, September 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • International Legal Theory
    • Laura Mai, Navigating transformations: Climate change and international law
    • Keri van Douwen, Seventeen men at Lake Success: In search of the International Law Commission
    • Matthias Goldmann, The ambiguity of colonial international law: Three approaches to the Namibian Genocide
    • Andreas Kotsakis, Beyond the machinery metaphors: Towards a theory of international organizations as machines
    • Juho Aalto, BinaryTech in motion: The sexgender in the European Court of Human Rights jurisprudence
    • Thomas Schultz, International law in the minds: On the ideational basis of the making, the changing, and the unmaking of international law
  • International Law and Practice
    • Sean Molloy, The Committee on the Rights of the Child and Article 12: Applying the Lundy model to treaty body recommendations
    • Alison Duxbury, Rewriting the law of international organizations: Whither the Asia Pacific?
  • International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
    • Kate McInnes, Seeking victim-centred accountability for violence against persons with disabilities at the United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry for Ukraine
    • Christos Papachristopoulos, On the punitive nature of ICC reparations orders

New Issue: World Trade Review

The latest issue of the World Trade Review (Vol. 23, no. 3, July 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Symposium: Dispute Settlement Inside and Outside of the WTO
    • Chad P. Bown & Petros C. Mavroidis, Things Have Changed: Dispute Settlement Inside and Outside of the WTO in 2022
    • Mona Pinchis-Paulsen, Kamal Saggi, & Petros C. Mavroidis, The National Security Exception at the WTO: Should It Just Be a Matter of When Members Can Avail of It? What About How?
    • Stratos Pahis, Appeals after the Appellate Body
    • Neeraj Rajan Sabitha, Adjudicating Sustainability Standards under FTAs: Labouring the Point Home
    • Chad P. Bown & Kathleen Claussen, The Rapid Response Labor Mechanism of the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement
  • Original Articles
    • Yoshiko Naiki, Smart Cities and International Trade Law
    • Ana Peres, Transience of (In)Formality: The Role of the Joint Initiatives in Reforming the WTO Negotiations
    • Sunayana Sasmal, Dongzhe Zhang, Emily Lydgate, & L. Alan Winters, Exempting Least Developed Countries from Border Carbon Adjustments: Simple Economically but Complex Legally

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Call for Papers: Multilateralism and the making of international law: Marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction

A call for papers has been issued for a seminar, supported by the Modern Law Review, on "Multilateralism and the making of international law: Marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction," which will take place December 4, 2024, at the University of Essex. The call is here.

Call for Submissions: Revue québécoise de droit international

The Revue québécoise de droit international has issued a call for submissions. Articles may be submitted in English, French, and Spanish.

Webinar: The Role of Transitional Justice in the Context of Counter-Terrorism: Opportunities and Challenges

On October 29, 2024, the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism will host a webinar on “The Role of Transitional Justice in the Context of Counter-Terrorism: Opportunities and Challenges.” Details are here.

Panel Discussion: Secondary Sanctions and the International Legal Order

On November 5, 2024, the T.M.C. Asser Instituut, in collaboration with the Ghent Rolin-Jaequemyns International Law Institute, Utrecht Centre for Regulation and Enforcement in Europe, the Multidisciplinary International Network on Sanctions, and the Utrecht University Platform on Peace, Security and Human Rights, will host a panel discussion on “Secondary Sanctions and the International Legal Order.” Details are here.

Hoffmann: Between Politics and Justice: International Criminal Law in Hungary

Tamás Hoffmann (Corvinus Univ. of Budapest) has posted Between Politics and Justice: International Criminal Law in Hungary (International Criminal Law Review, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
This article gives an overview of the application of international criminal law norms in the Hungarian legal system in the post-World War II. era. It introduces history's first domestic criminal trial against a former head of state for the crime of aggression in front of the Hungarian People's Tribunals; the origins of the widespread adoption of universal jurisdiction by socialist countries; how international law was used to prosecute crimes against humanity committed in the communist era and later instrumentalized to serve as an anti-communist tool; and how and why the first ever trial based on universal jurisdiction in Eastern Europe was conducted in Budapest.

Call for Submissions: Cyber Law Toolkit

A call for submissions has been issued for the 2025 update of the Cyber Law Toolkit, an online resource on international law and cyber operations. The call is here.

Webinar: From Barriers to Abuse: Border Hardening and Torture Allegations

On October 2, 2024, the American Society of International Law Interest Groups on International Law and Social Science and Human Rights and the European Society of International Law Interest Group on Social Science and International Law will host a talk by Beth Simmons (University of Pennsylvania) and Gino Pauselli (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne) on "From Barriers to Abuse: Border Hardening and Torture Allegations." The discussants will be Adam Chilton (Univ. of Chicago) and Ezgi Yildiz (California State Univ., Long Beach). Details are here.

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

The latest issue of International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics (Vol. 24, nos. 2-3, September 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Kyle S. Herman, Doomed to fail? A call to reform global climate governance and greenhouse gas inventories
  • Heiner von Luepke, Karsten Neuhoff, & Catherine Marchewitz, Bridges over troubled waters: Climate clubs, alliances, and partnerships as safeguards for effective international cooperation?
  • K. B. Mantlana, M. Ndiitwani, & S. Ndhlev, A perspective on the significance of reporting climate change adaptation information to the united nations framework convention on climate change e
  • Ina Tessnow-von Wysocki & Alice B. M. Vadrot, Pathways of scientific input into intergovernmental negotiations: a new agreement on marine biodiversity
  • Sachin Kumar Sharma, Paavni Mathur, Ahamed Ashiq Shajahan, Lakshmi Swathi Ganti, & Alisha Goswami, WTO negotiations and repurposing agriculture subsidies for a sustainable future
  • Margot Hurlbert & Joyeeta Gupta, The split ladder of policy problems, participation, and politicization: constitutional water change in Ecuador and Chile
  • Elif Oral, The environmental rule of law and the protection of human rights defenders: law, society, technology, and markets
  • Tom Barry, Arctic wetlands, an evaluation of progress towards implementation of the Ramsar convention on wetlands: 1978–2022
  • Pradip Kumar Sarker, Lukas Giessen, Max Göhrs, Sohui Jeon, Minette Nago, Fredy David Polo-Villanueva, & Sarah Lilian Burns, The forest policy outputs of regional regimes: a qualitative comparative analysis on the effects of formalization, hegemony and issue-focus around the globe
  • Flavia Fabiano, Yixian Sun: Certifying China: the rise and limits of transnational sustainability governance in emerging economies

New Issue: London Review of International Law

The latest issue of the London Review of International Law (Vol. 12, no. 2, July 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Henrietta Zeffert, ‘Nowhere home’
    • Juliana Santos de Carvalho, Doing legality as doing drag: the Yogyakarta Principles and the productive power of performing international law-making
    • Céline Hocquet, Tracking the civilising mission’s continuities in externalised migration controls: a critical analysis of EU cooperation with third countries
  • Section Three
    • Tor Krever, Marina Veličković, Frédéric Mégret, Karen Engle, Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Robert Knox, Shahd Hammouri, John Quigley, Nora Jaber, Sophie Rigney, Sara Kendall, Clare da Silva, Christine Schwöbel-Patel, Nahed Samour, Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Ruti G Teitel, Outi Korhonen, Bill Bowring, Lori A Allen, David Chandler, Vasuki Nesiah, Ilan Pappé, Michael Fakhri, Zinaida Miller, Mark A Drumbl, Hani Sayed, Ntina Tzouvala, Daniel Joyce, Costas Douzinas, Souheir Edelbi, Florian Hoffmann, Zeina Jallad, Arnulf Becker Lorca, Alaa Hajyahia, Reshard L Kolabhai, Teresa Almeida Cravo, Madelaine Chiam, Francisco-José Quintana, Laura Betancur-Restrepo, Fabia Fernandes Carvalho, Lys Kulamadayil, Darryl Li, John Reynolds, Abdelghany Sayed, Luis Eslava, Jessica Whyte, Martin Clark, Richard Clements, Christopher Gevers, Ihab Shalbak, Justina Uriburu, Umut Özsu, Gleider Hernández, & Immi Tallgren, On international law and Gaza: critical reflections

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Casey-Maslen: Hybrid Warfare under International Law

Stuart Casey-Maslen
(Univ. of Pretoria - Centre for Human Rights) has published Hybrid Warfare under International Law (Hart Pubishing 2024). Here's the abstract:

This book addresses the regulation of hybrid warfare under relevant branches of international law, beginning with the law on inter-state use of force (jus ad bellum).

Firstly, the book assesses the extent to which forms of hybrid warfare comply with or violate international humanitarian law/the law of armed conflict. It then looks at law enforcement action in response to hybrid warfare, both on land and on the high seas, and addresses hybrid warfare from the perspective of international counterterrorism law. It goes on to tackle the constraints applied to hybrid warfare under international human rights law, and looks at how hybrid warfare could be constrained under disarmament law. The final two chapters look at accountability for the conduct of hybrid warfare, concluding with the question: can we move towards a less fragmented set of international legal rules that will govern hybrid warfare in the future?

Conference: The London Conference on International Law 2024

The London Conference on International Law 2024 will take place on October 17-18. Details are here.

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Sadat & Huesman: How the Ukraine Situation is Testing the International Criminal Court

Leila N. Sadat (Washington Univ. in St. Louis - Law) & Jack Hueseman have posted How the Ukraine Situation is Testing the International Criminal Court. Here's the abstract:
Following its eight-year occupation of Crimea, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The ensuing war has resulted in a cascade of atrocities committed by Russian armed forces, including widespread and indiscriminate shelling of Ukraine’s cities, attacks on Ukrainian civilians, and the targeting of civilian infrastructure including Ukraine’s electrical grid. This essay addresses the challenges to the pursuit of justice for Ukraine, in particular at the International Criminal Court (ICC). It likens the conduct of the war in Ukraine with the siege and bombardment of Sarajevo in the 1990s, which involved similar kinds of attacks and resulted in successful prosecutions of high-ranking officials for war crimes and crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). The Chapter examines the ICTY prosecutions in the context of the current ICC arrest warrants directed against Russian nationals and explores the legal differences between the ICC and the ICTY that might prove both instructive and challenging to the ICC. The Chapter evaluates other challenges faced by the ICC, including its jurisdiction over Russian nationals, its lack of jurisdiction over the crime of aggression, the ICC’s relative weakness compared with Russia’s global superpower status, and the problem of double standards introduced by the ICC and States in responding to situation in the State of Palestine following the October 7 attacks. It concludes by recognizing that the Ukraine situation represents a watershed moment for international criminal law, offering the ICC the possibility of redemption in the minds of many, particularly European and Western nations, but threatening the support of others in the Global South if the Court does not pursue justice without fear and favor in Ukraine and elsewhere.

New Issue: Archiv des Völkerrechts

The latest issue of Archiv des Völkerrechts (Vol. 62, no. 1, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Abhandlungen
    • Sué González Hauck, Systemerhaltung durch Systematisierung: Lehrbücher, Allgemeine Kurse und Kodifikation im Völkerrecht als politische Projekte
    • Sigrid Boysen, Allgemeine Rechtsgrundsätze und die Identität des Völkerrechts
    • Isabel Lischewski, Zwischen Funktion, Interaktion und Exklusion - Die Rolle des Verfahrensrechts im Rahmen völkerrechtlicher Verträge
    • Hannah Birkenkötter, Das Recht internationaler Organisationen als Rechtsquelle - aber für welche Akteure?
    • Jens T. Theilen, Jus cogens als Performativität des Nichts: Eine Kritik der Hierarchisierung im Völkerrecht

New Issue: International Legal Materials

The latest issue of International Legal Materials (Vol. 63, no. 3, June 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Question of the Delimitation of the Continental Shelf Between Nicaragua and Colombia Beyond 200 Nautical Miles from the Nicaraguan Coast (Nicar. v. Colom.) (I.C.J.), with introductory note by Christine Pichel
  • Situation in the Republic of the Philippines (Int'l Crim. Ct. App. Chamber), with introductory note by Paul Bradfield
  • The African Guiding Principles on the Rights of Migrants, Refugees and Asylum Seekers (Afr. Comm'n H.P.R.), with introductory note by Luwam Dirar, Ian M. Kysel, & Fatma Raach