Friday, August 13, 2021

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 34, no. 3, September 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • International Legal Theory
    • Patrick Capps & Henrik Palmer Olsen, Explaining power and authority in international courts
    • Filipe dos Reis & Janis Grzybowski, The matrix reloaded: Reconstructing the boundaries between (international) law and politics
    • Arthur Roberto Capella Giannattasio, Débora Roma Drezza, & Maria Beatriz Wehby, In/on applied legal research: Pragmatic limits to the impact of peripheral international legal scholarship via policy papers
    • Jessie Hohmann, Diffuse subjects and dispersed power: New materialist insights and cautionary lessons for international law
    • Kathryn McNeilly, How time matters in the UN Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review: Humans, objects, and time creation
    • Daniel Ricardo Quiroga-Villamarín, Vicarius Christi: Extraterritoriality, pastoral power, and the critique of secular international law
  • International Law and Practice
    • Sarah Heathcote, Secession, self-determination and territorial disagreements: Sovereignty claims in the contemporary South Pacific
    • Yarik Kryvoi, Private or public adjudication? Procedure, substance and legitimacy
    • Mintao Nie, Divided governmental structure and state compliance with international human rights law: A reputation-based approach
  • International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
    • Geoffrey Thomas Dancy, The hidden impacts of the ICC: An innovative assessment using Google data
    • Luke Moffett & Clara Sandoval, Tilting at windmills: Reparations and the International Criminal Court