Wednesday, August 6, 2025

New Volume: German Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the German Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 67, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • FORUM – The International Court of Justice’s Advisory Opinion on the Occupied Palestinian Territories
    • Heike Krieger, Third Party Obligations and World Ordering in the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on the Occupied Palestinian Territory
    • Aeyal Gross, From Factual and Conceptualist to Normative and Functional: The Law of Occupation After the ICJ Advisory Opinion on the Israeli Occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory
  • FOCUS - Time and International Law
    • Kenneth Chan Yoon Onn & Thomas Kleinlein, The Lives and Times of International Law
    • Paula Rhein-Fischer, Multi-Temporalities in International Litigation: Coinciding Times Before the International Court of Justice in Recent Genocide Cases
    • Rebecca Mignot-Mahdavi, In Praise of Disorder: Conceptualising Events in International Law
    • Jessie Hohmann, Chronotopes, International Law, and the Botanic Gardens of Empire and Colony
    • Monica Garcia-Salmones Rovira, Now and Yet Not New: Principles of Global Law in UNCITRAL Working Group III
    • Franziska Berg, Challenging Time(s) for Future Generations’ Human Rights
    • Bérénice K. Schramm, The Haunting of International Law: ‘Making Polysense’ of our Uchronian Times of In/Justice
  • Walther Schücking Lecture
    • Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann, Transforming United Nations and World Trade Organisation Legal Systems Through Regulatory Competition and ‘Lawfare’
  • General Articles
    • Nguyen Phuong Dung & Nguyen Thi Hong Yen, Environmental Protection in Response to Marine Pollution Caused by Plastic Waste: A Comparative Study in ASEAN Region
    • Magne Frostad, Piracy, Terrorism, Armed Conflict, or Armed Attack? The Protection of Merchant and Naval Vessels in the Red Sea
    • Henrique Marcos, Causal Loops, Ontological Crises, and Customary International Law
  • German Practice
    • Agata Daszko, Exploring Investment Arbitration Issues in Front of German Courts: How Far Does the Komstroy Shadow Reach?
    • Alexander Elfgen, The German Position on a Possible Prosecution of the Crime of Aggression in Relation to the War inUkraine: An Indecisive and Self-Contradicting Approach?
    • Annika Knauer, Whose Interest is the ‘Best Interest of the Child’? – The German Federal Constitutional Court’s Decision of 1 February 2023 on the Law to Combat Child Marriage
    • Cora Masche, Women’s Rights Violations in Afghanistan: Concerted Response by Germany and Three Partners
    • Jasmin Oppermann, The Legalisation of Cannabis in Germany: National Ambitions Versus International Obligations
    • Moritz J. Pollack, Doctrinal Approaches to Climate Change Obligations: A Comparative Analysis of Germany, the European Union, and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Advisory Proceedings
    • Moritz Rhades, Weapon Export Control Before German Administrative Courts: Scrutiny or Obscurity?
    • Christian J. Voss, Navigating Legal Boundaries: German Participation in the European Union Mission EUNAVFOR ASPIDES