Wednesday, August 17, 2022

New Issue: Leiden Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (Vol. 35, no. 3, September 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • Panos Merkouris, Debating interpretation: On the road to Ithaca
  • International Legal Theory: Symposium on International Thought and the Making of the Canon
    • Paolo Amorosa & Claire Vergerio, Canon-making in the history of international legal and political thought
    • Juan Pablo Scarfi, Francisco de Vitoria and the (geo)politics of canonization in Spain/America
    • Seán Molloy, Reception, context and canonicity: The demonization, normalization and eventual proliferation of G. W. F. Hegel in international relations
    • Jacob Giltaij, The rediscovery of the Roman jus gentium and the post 1945 international order
    • Francesca Iurlaro, Between authority and (in)authenticity: How literary canons shaped jus gentium
  • International Law and Practice
    • Christian Schaller, Hardly predictable and yet an equitable solution: Delimitation by judicial process as an option for Greece and Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean
    • Arınç Onat Kılıç, Secondary objectives of the European Central Bank and economic growth: A human rights perspective
    • Jakob Hohnerlein, Treaty rigidity and domestic democracy: Functions of and constitutional limits to democratic self-binding
    • Donatella Alessandrini, Global value chains, development and the long duree of trade and investment law
  • Hague International Tribunals: International Court of Justice
    • James Gerard Devaney, The role of precedent in the jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice: A constructive interpretation
  • International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
    • Carmel O’Sullivan, New court, same division: The Bemba case as an illustration of the continued confusion regarding the command responsibility doctrine
    • Panagiota Kotzamani, Towards a unified approach to superior responsibility in international criminal law: Establishing the links between participation to the crime and the superior responsibility doctrine
    • Lloyd T. Chigowe, The ICC and the situation in Afghanistan: A critical examination of the role of the Pre-Trial Chambers in the initiation of investigations proprio motu