Saturday, March 12, 2022

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 32, no. 4, November 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • EJIL Roll of Honour; 2021 EJIL Peer Reviewer Prize; Changes in the Masthead; Germany v Italy: Jurisdictional Immunities – Redux (and Redux and Redux); 10 Good Reads; Rabia Balkhi – The Legacy of a Medieval Poet in Afghanistan; In This Issue; In This Issue – Reviews
  • Articles
    • Fuad Zarbiyev, On the Judge Centredness of the International Legal Self
    • Katie A. Johnston, The Nature and Context of Rules and the Identification of Customary International Law
    • Jie (Jeanne) Huang, Conflicts and Tentative Solutions to Protecting Personal Data in Investment Arbitration
    • Sherzod Shadikhodjaev, Technological Neutrality and Regulation of Digital Trade: How Far Can We Go?
    • Dafna Dror-Shpoliansky & Yuval Shany, It’s the End of the (Offline) World as We Know It: From Human Rights to Digital Human Rights – A Proposed Typology
  • Roaming Charges
    • Farhat Chira, Poetic Voices from the Past: Rabia Balkhi 4th Hijri Century Poet
  • Legal/Illegal: Use of Force to Recover an Occupied Territory
    • Tom Ruys & Felipe Rodríguez Silvestre, Illegal: The Recourse to Force to Recover Occupied Territory and the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War
    • Dapo Akande & Antonios Tzanakopoulos, Legal: Use of Force in Self-Defence to Recover Occupied Territory
  • Critical Review of Governance
    • Jinyuan Su, Is the Establishment of Air Defence Identification Zones Outside National Airspace in Accordance with International Law?
  • Observations from the 16th Annual Meeting of the European Society of International Law (Stockholm, 2021)
    • Pål Wrange, The 16th Annual Conference of the European Society of International Law: Welcome Remarks
    • Martti Koskenniemi & Sarah M.H. Nouwen, The Politics of Global Lawmaking: A Conversation
    • Sotirios-Ioannis Lekkas, The Hybridity of International Lawmaking: Impressions and Afterthoughts from the ESIL 2021 Stockholm Conference
    • Romain Le Boeuf, Of Doubts and Confusions
  • Symposium: The Restatement (Fourth)
    • Sarah M.H. Nouwen, Christian J. Tams & J.H.H. Weiler, A Transatlantic Symposium on the Restatement (Fourth)
    • Sarah M.H. Nouwen, Paul B. Stephan, Christian J. Tams & J.H.H. Weiler, The Restatement (Fourth): An Interview with One of the Two Co-ordinating Reporters
    • Anne Peters, The American Law Institute’s Restatement of the Law: Bastion, Bridge and Behemoth
    • Hélène Ruiz Fabri, The Limits and the Appeal of the Restatement
    • Paul Stephan, The US Context of the Restatement of the Law (Fourth): The Foreign Relations Law of the United States
    • Alina Miron & Paolo Palchetti, Foreign Relations Law on Treaty Matters from Restatement (Third) to Restatement (Fourth): More a Filter Than a Bridge
    • Curtis A. Bradley & Edward T. Swaine, Restating US Foreign Relations Law: Lessons from the Treaty Materials
    • Cedric Ryngaert, The Restatement and the Law of Jurisdiction: A Commentary
    • William S. Dodge, A Modest Approach to the Customary International Law of Jurisdiction
    • Roger O’Keefe, The Restatement of Foreign Sovereign Immunity: Tutto il Mondo è Paese
    • David P. Stewart & Ingrid B. Wuerth, Sovereign Immunity as Liminal Space
  • Review Essay
    • Jan Petrov, When Should International Courts Intervene? How Populism, Democratic Decay and Crisis of Liberal Internationalism Complicate Things. Review of Shai Dothan, International Judicial Review: When Should International Courts Intervene?
  • Book Reviews
    • Mary Ellen O’Connell, reviewing Chiara Redaelli, Intervention in Civil Wars: Effectiveness, Legitimacy, and Human Rights
    • Ioannis Kampourakis, reviewing Stefano Ponte, Business, Power and Sustainability in a World of Global Value Chains
    • Justin Lindeboom, reviewing Pavlos Eleftheriadis, A Union of Peoples: Europe as a Community of Principle
  • The Last Page
    • Rabia Balkhi (transl. Munazza Ebtikar), In the Elāhi-nāma by Farid al-Din ʿAttār (12th century)