The latest issue of the International Organizations Law Review (Vol. 22, no. 3, 2025) is out. Contents include:- Special Issue: International Organizations Between Mission and Market
- Jan Klabbers, International Organizations between Mission and Market: Editor’s Introduction
- Melissa J Durkee, Privatising International (Organizations) Law
- Tleuzhan Zhunussova, Private Sector Funding in the UN System: Re-thinking the Legitimacy of International Organizations
- Marco Moraes, Legal Aspects of Innovative Finance at UNHCR: The Case of the Global Islamic Fund for Refugees
- Allison O’Neill & Jean Abboud, The Global Fund and the Private Sector: A Steady and Healthy Relationship
- Ukri Soirila, Seeing Like a Firm: International Organizations in the Era of New Public Management
- José Lobo, Through the Looking-Glass: Doing R&D Under International Law
- Sebastián Machado Ramírez, Transformation Costs: The Cases of the World Tourism Organization and Intelsat
- Ayako Hatano, Ethical AI and Business & Human Rights: A Critical Appraisal of UNESCO’s Collaboration with the Private Sector
- Jan Klabbers, Change in International Organizations: The ILO in the Global Political Economy
- Jean d’Aspremont, Some Thoughts on the Invention of Public-Private Thinking
- General Articles
- Rita Guerreiro Teixeira, Reaching Beyond Institutional Boundaries in Fisheries Management—the Case of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas
- Jacqueline Wood & Domenico Carolei, The OECD Standards on Civil Society: Protecting Civic Space while Making Civil Society Organisations More Accountable
- Kaijun Pan, What’s in a Procedure(s)?—Legal Implications of the General Assembly’s Veto Initiative
