Friday, May 27, 2022

New Volume: German Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the German Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 63, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Obituary
    • Andreas von Arnauld, In Memoriam Jost Delbrück (1935–2020)
  • In Remembrance
    • Knut Ipsen, From Apprenticeship to Scholarship
    • Karl-Ulrich Meyn, Kiel – Göttingen – Kiel
    • Eibe Riedel, In Memoriam Jost Delbrück
    • Klaus Dicke, Jost Delbrück’s Office Desk
    • Stephan Hobe, Memories of my Teacher Jost Delbrück
    • Anne Peters, The Gentle Globaliser
    • Christian Tietje, Jost Delbrück: Some Personal Remarks
    • Doris König, How I Remember Jost Delbrück
    • Michael Koch, Jost Delbrück – a Grateful Tribute
    • Rüdiger Wolfrum, Some Highlights from my 11 Years at the Institute for International Law with Jost Delbrück
    • Ursula Heinz, Memories of Jost Delbrück
    • Daniel Thürer, About Jost Delbrück
    • Alfred C. Aman, Jr., Jost Delbrück: A Reflection
    • Roger B. Dworkin, Jost Delbrück: My Friend
  • FORUM – Lost at Sea? Rescue Operations in the Mediterranean Between International and National Legal Regulation
    • Nele Matz-Lück, Ports of Refuge for Private Rescue Vessels
    • Lorenzo Schiano Di Pepe, Search and Rescue in the Central Mediterranean Sea: A Legal Analysis of the Recent Italian Practice
  • FOCUS – Minorities, Autonomies, and Referenda
    • Andreas von Arnauld, Introduction
    • Andreas von Arnauld, From Feudal Law to Minority Rights: The Legal Metamorphosis of the Schleswig-Holstein Question
    • Michael Jonas, Drawing Borders and Protecting Minorities in a Post-Imperial World: Legal Conflicts and the League of Nations’ Minority Protection Regime
    • Gleider Hernández & Tom Sparks, Categorising Self-Determination: Four Forms
    • Tove H. Malloy, Concepts of Non-Territorial Autonomy: Agreements, or Arrangements?
    • Jure Vidmar, Catalonia and the Law of Statehood
    • Paul Behrens, ‘The Saltire in the Sporran’: Scotland Between Devolution and Independence
    • Stefan Oeter, Kurds Between Quests for Statehood, Struggle for Autonomy and Denied Minority Rights
    • Walther Schücking Lecture
    • Eibe Riedel, Standards as Sources
  • General Articles
    • Hannah Birkenkötter & Berkan Kaya, The International Court of Justice in an Age of Inter-Legality: A Survey of its Case Law in the New Millennium
    • Yvonne Breitwieser-Faria, Prevention of Atrocity Crimes: Legal Obligations of States and Due Diligence
    • Agnes Chong, State Responsibility for Climate Change Damage and the Evolving Regime of Human Rights
    • Francesca Ippolito, Struggling with Climate Change: Environmental Rights as Children’s Rights and the Potential of the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child
    • Isabel M. Kaiser, The king is dead, long live the …: Evaluating Alternatives to the WTO Appellate Body Within and Outside the WTO Regime
    • Erlend M. Leonhardsen, Pride and Perseverance: Strategic Use of Rebus Sic Stantibus in Russian Foreign Policy 1870–1950
    • Michel Rouleau-Dick, A Blueprint for Survival: Low-Lying Island States, Climate Change, and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
    • Christian Tomuschat, The Changing Faces of the UN Security Council
  • German Practice
    • Henning Büttner & Nathalie Joyce Zavazava, German Corporate and Government Officials’ Involvement in Arms Trade with Countries of the Saudi-led Coalition in Yemen: A Link in the Supply Chain Leading to Criminal Liability for Alleged War Crimes?
    • Jule Giegling, Operation IRINI – The Boarding and Search of the MV Roseline A
    • Max Jürgens, Enforcement of Security Council Resolutions: The Judgment of the Administrative Court of Berlin in the City Hostel Case
    • Moritz von Rochow, Tunneling the Baltic – An Appendix of Sovereignty?
    • Felix Würkert, (Re-)gaining Citizenship via Constitutional Law, European Human Rights and Transitional Justice: The Federal Constitutional Court on Article 116 (2) BL
    • Maximilian Zuber & Paul Klahre, Germany’s Tenure in the UN Security Council 2019–2020: Between Upholding and Extending the Rules-based International Order