Thursday, July 4, 2024

New Volume: German Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the German Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 65, 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • FORUM – Rethinking Military Necessity and other Belligerent Rights in Wars of Aggression
    • Chile Eboe-Osuji, Military Necessity and Aggression
    • Claus Kreß, A Reply to Judge Eboe-Osuji
    • Chile Eboe-Osuji, Reply to Professor Claus Kreß
  • FOCUS – Dispute Settlement and Community Interests: Colloquium in Honour of Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Wolfrum’s 80th Birthday
    • Rüdiger Wolfrum, The Potential of International, Regional, and National Dispute Settlement Mechanisms in Deciding on Issues Concerning Community Interests
    • Doris König, The Federal Constitutional Court’s Order on the Federal Climate Change Act of 24 March 2021
    • Nele Matz-Lück, Claiming Community Interests in International Law
    • Volker Röben, The Mask of Dimitrios: Objective and Subjective Approaches to judicial Enforcement of International Law on Common Interests
    • Anja Seibert-Fohr, Public Health as a Community Interest: What Role for the European Court of Human Rights?
    • Peter-Tobias Stoll, Hardly About People and Climate: Court of Justice of the European Union’s People’s Climate Case – Exemplifying Luhmanns’ Ecological Communication
    • Silja Voeneky, Key Challenges for Climate Change Litigation – Human Rights meet Precaution: The Duarte Agostinho Case
    • Holger P. Hestermeyer, Community Interests and the Objectives of International Dispute Resolution: A Paradigm-Shift for the International Court of Justice?
  • Walther Schücking Lecture
    • Liesbeth Lijnzaad, Fairness in the Law of the Sea, a Preliminary Enquiry
  • General Articles
    • André Nunes Chaib, International Organisation as Government: Rereading Georges Scelle’s Theory of International Government
    • Dominic Npoanlari Dagbanja, Developmental Constitutionalism and Treatybased Investment Protection in Africa
    • Fuad Zarbiyev, The International Court of Justice and Specialised International Adjudicative Bodies: From Indifference to Authority Trading
  • German Practice
    • Franziska Bachmann, Revisiting the NetzDG and Its Changes Against the Backdrop of International Human Rights Law
    • Katia Hamann, A New Government in a ‘Perfect Storm’ of Crises: An International Law Perspective on the 2021–2025 Coalition Agreement
    • Ralf Lewandowski, Germany’s Role in the Prosecution of Russian War Criminals in Ukraine
    • Celina S. Lubahn Greppler, The Return of the Benin Bronzes from Germany on the Significance of the Joint Declaration between Germany and Nigeria in Light of European Restitution Practice
    • Simon A. Miller, The Increasing Relevance of Universal Jurisdiction Over Core Crimes
    • Felix Schott, The Military Evacuation from Afghanistan by the German Armed Forces: A Change in Germany’s Legal Position?
    • Leon Seidl, Shifting Priorities in a Changing World: Germany at the 12th WTO Ministerial Conference
    • Lisa Wiese, The Question of a ‘State of Palestine’ Before the German Administrative Courts