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