Tuesday, April 28, 2015

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 2, June 2015) is out. Contents include:
  • International Law and Its Methodology
    • Gregory Shaffer, The New Legal Realist Approach to International Law
    • Jakob V.H. Holtermann & Mikael Rask Madsen, European New Legal Realism and International Law: How to Make International Law Intelligible
    • Andrew Lang, New Legal Realism, Empiricism, and Scientism: The Relative Objectivity of Law and Social Science
    • Alexandra Huneeus, Human Rights between Jurisprudence and Social Science
    • Daniel Bodansky, Legal Realism and its Discontents
  • International Law and Practice
    • Saïda El Boudouhi, The National Judge as an Ordinary Judge of International Law? Invocability of Treaty Law in National Courts
    • Anuscheh Farahat, Enhancing Constitutional Justice by Using External References: The European Court of Human Rights’ Reasoning on the Protection against Expulsion
  • Hague International Tribunals: International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
    • Darryl Robinson, Inescapable Dyads: Why the International Criminal Court Cannot Win
    • Alicia Gil Gil & Elena Maculan, Current Trends in the Definition of ‘Perpetrator’ by the International Criminal Court: From the Decision on the Confirmation of Charges in the Lubanga case to the Katanga judgment