Tuesday, February 4, 2020

New Volume: International Law Studies

The latest volume of International Law Studies (Vol. 95, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Feature Articles
    • Terry D. Gill & Kinga Tibori-Szabó, Twelve Key Questions on Self-Defense against Non-State Actors
    • Hans-Georg Dederer & Tassilo Singer, Adverse Cyber Operations: Causality, Attribution, Evidence, and Due Diligence
    • Craig H. Allen, The Peacetime Right of Approach and Visit and Effective Security Council Sanctions Enforcement at Sea
    • Charles H. Norchi, Law as Strategy: Thinking Below the State in Afghanistan
    • Ezequiel Heffes, Armed Groups and the Protection of Health Care
    • Jeffrey T. Biller & Michael N. Schmitt, Classification of Cyber Capabilities and Operations as Weapons, Means, or Methods of Warfare
    • Ryan J. Vogel, Beyond Geneva: Detainee Review Processes in Non-International Armed Conflict—A U.S. Perspective
    • Kenneth Watkin, Medical Care in Urban Conflict
    • Sean Watts, Humanitarian Logic and the Law of Siege: A Study of the Oxford Guidance on Relief Actions
  • International Law and Conflict at Sea
    • Marco Longobardo, The Occupation of Maritime Territory under International Humanitarian Law
    • Phillip J. Drew, Can We Starve the Civilians? Exploring the Dichotomy between the Traditional Law of Maritime Blockade and Humanitarian Initiatives
    • Richard L. Kilpatrick, Jr., Marine Insurance Prohibitions in Contemporary Economic Warfare
    • Natalie Klein, Maritime Autonomous Vehicles within the International Law Framework to Enhance Maritime Security
  • The Fog of Law
    • Jann K. Kleffner, The Legal Fog of an Illusion: Three Reflections on "Organization" and "Intensity" as Criteria for the Temporal Scope of the Law of Non-International Armed Conflict
    • Adil Ahmad Haque, Indeterminacy in the Law of Armed Conflict