Wednesday, September 5, 2018

New Issue: Melbourne Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Melbourne Journal of International Law (Vol. 19, no. 1, 2018) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Michael Douglas & Nicholas Loadsman, The Impact of the Hague Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts
    • Andrew Edgar & Rayner Thwaites, Implementing Treaties in Domestic Law: Translation, Enforcement and Administrative Law
    • Gabrielle Holly, Transnational Tort and Access to Remedy under the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Kamasee v Commonwealth
    • David Hughes, Investigation as Legitimisation: The Development, Use and Misuse of Informal Complementarity
    • Ching-Fu Lin & Han-Wei Liu, Regulatory Rationalisation Clauses in FTAs: A Complete Survey of the US, EU and China
    • Yvette Maker, Anna Arstein-Kerslake, Bernadette McSherry, Jeannie Marie Paterson & Lisa Brophy, Ensuring Equality for Persons with Cognitive Disabilities in Consumer Contracting: An International Human Rights Law Perspective
    • Frédéric Mégret, The Laws of War and the Structure of Masculine Power
    • Aoife O’Donoghue, ‘The Admixture of Feminine Weakness and Susceptibility’: Gendered Personifications of the State in International Law
    • Ksenia Polonskaya, Diversity in the Investor–State Arbitration: Intersectionality Must Be a Part of the Conversation
    • Barrie Sander, The Method is the Message: Law, Narrative Authority and Historical Contestation in International Criminal Courts
    • Cait Storr, ‘Imperium in Imperio’: Sub-Imperialism and the Formation of Australia as a Subject of International Law
    • Caleb H Wheeler, Re-Examining Corporate Liability at the International Criminal Court Through the Lens of the Article 15 Communication against Chiquita Brands International