Friday, June 28, 2024

New Volume: Australian International Law Journal

The latest volume of the Australian International Law Journal (Vol. 29, 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Juliette McIntyre, Consenting to be Bound or Co-operative Condemnation? Article 63 Interventions at the International Court of Justice
    • Makaela Fehlhaber, The Evolution of 'Control' in Attributing Conduct of a Non-State Actor to a State in Public International Law
    • Lucy Elizabeth Strapp, Tempting Fates: The Relevance and Applicability of Existing International Environmental Law in the Context of Global Geoengineering Governance
    • John Abrahamson, The Multilateral Development Instrument Proposal - An International Foreign Aid Treaty Framework to Address Poverty
    • Nicholas Aroney & Paul Taylor, The Rights and Wrongs of 18C: An International Perspective on the Racial Hatred Provisions of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975
    • Alexandra Fowler, The Shadow of the UK's Operation Northmoor: Salient Lessons for Australia's Afghanistan Prosecutions
    • Rhiannon Ayse Bell, Gathering Evidence Abroad for Use in Local Proceedings: A Tale of Two Legal Traditions
    • Sagi Pearl, Private International Law and Private Law: The Corrective Justice Test
    • Rosemary Dent, More than Data: Determining 'Feasible' Measures of Distinction in a Data-driven World
    • Nathan Landis, The Devil Wears Grey
    • Joshua Carmer, The Lethal Autonomous Weapons Debate: Where to Next for the Guiding Principles?
  • Case Notes
    • William Garske, Alleged Violations of Sovereign Rights and Maritime Spaces in The Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v Colombia), Judgment
    • Emily Leggett, Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (The Gambia v Myanmar), Preliminary Objections
    • Connor Wright, The Liability of States for Inadequate Climate Action under International Human Rights Law - Billy v Australia