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Showing posts with label Yearbooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yearbooks. Show all posts

Saturday, September 18, 2021

New Volume: Baltic Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Baltic Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 19, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Ineta Ziemele, Latvian Tradition in International Law
  • Ieva Miļūna, Latvian Tradition in State Responsibility
  • Jānis Lazdiņš, Ainārs Lerhis, Jānis Pleps, & Ineta Ziemele, Legal and Historical Elements of Latvia’s Restoration of Independence
  • Žaneta Mikosa, Evolution of Procedural Rights and Legal Standing in Environmental Matters in Latvia
  • Edvards Kušners & Esmeralda Balode-Buraka, Behind the Scenes: EU Accession Challenges
  • Christoph Schewe, Shattering the Concept of EU Citizenship? The Potential Impact of Brexit and Potential Secession of Catalonia on EU Citizenship
  • Agnese Saukuma, Legal and Ethical Issues in Designing Online Courts
  • George Chakhvadze, Mafruza Sultana, & Jānis Grasis, The Concept of Maritime Terrorism Between Traditionalism and Expansionism: Re-thinking Maritime Terrorism as a Transnational Crime

Sunday, August 22, 2021

New Volume: Asian Yearbook of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law

The latest volume of the Asian Yearbook of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (Vol. 5, 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Part 1 Focused Theme - Law, Culture and Human Rights in Asia and the Middle East
    • Francesca Sironi De Gregorio, Heritage Destruction in Syria and Northern Iraq: Which is the Applicable Law?
    • Barbora Dmitričenko & Layla Hashemi, Countering Online Antiquities Trafficking Networks Financing Terrorism in Syria and Iraq
    • Allison McClelland, International Law and the Protection of Cultural Property in Non-International Armed Conflict: Applicability to Non-State Armed Groups in the Syrian Conflict
    • Julia Emtseva, Destruction and Looting of Cultural Property in Yemen’s Civil War: Legal Implications and Methods of Prevention
    • Seán Fobbe, Natia Navrouzov, Kristen Hopper, Ahmed Khudida Burjus, Graham Philip, Maher G Nawaf, Daniel Lawrence, Helen Walasek, Sara Birjandian, Majid Hassan Ali, Salim Rashidani, Hassan Salih, Dawood Sulaiman Qari, & Faris Mishko, Cultural Heritage Destruction during the Islamic State’s Genocide against the Yazidis
    • Simona Novaretti, Trust(s) ‘with Chinese Characteristics’ and Cultural Heritage Protection in the People’s Republic of China
    • Sofia Poulopoulou, Implementing the Obligation to Return Illicitly Exported Cultural Property to the Authorities of an Occupied Territory: Who Bears the Responsibility?
    • Elena Perez-Alvaro, Human Rights and Underwater Cultural Heritage: Migrant Shipwrecks
    • Beatriz Barreiro Carril, Amin Maalouf and the Value of Cultural Diversity for Universal Cultural Rights in International Law: Lessons from the Levant
  • Part 2 General Articles
    • Helen Liebling & Hazel Barrett, Social Enterprise Groups for South Sudanese Refugee Survivors of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence and Torture Living in Settlements in Northern Uganda
    • Alice Lopes Fabris, The Practice of Asian States Implementing the Principle for Protection of Monuments and Works of Art before World War I
    • D.D. Agusman, A. Afriansyah, & I. Fadilah, Debunking the Pandora Box of Decolonisation: An Inquiry into Papuan Separatism from the Lens of International Law
    • Jing Min Tan and Alec Thompson, Moving Past Postcolonial: Rethinking Indigeneity and Self-determination in Southeast Asia
  • Part 3 Developments in State Practice
    • Vrinda Narain, Reconciling Constitutional Law, Gender Equality and Religious Difference: Lessons from Shayara Bano, India’s Triple Talaq Decision
    • Niloufar Omidi, Cultural Legitimacy Lost Through the Denial of Cultural Rights within a Multicultural Context: The Case of the Islamic Republic of Iran
    • Tahirih T. Danesh, Character Education and Cultural Rights: The Case of Minorities in Iran
    • Zia Ullah Ranjah, Protecting Environment through Judicial Activism in Pakistan and India
    • Makoto Shimada, Repatriation of Ainu Human Remains Excavated in Graveyards: Possible Solution under the Civil Code of Japan

Thursday, August 12, 2021

New Volume: Irish Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Irish Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 14, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Maria Grazia Giammarinaro, A Human Rights-Based Approach to Trafficking in Persons in Conflict Situations
    • Shane Darcy, Embedding Business and Human Rights in Ireland: Legislating for Human Rights Due Diligence
    • Ríán Derrig, Was Rockall Conquered? An Application of the Law of Territory to a Rock in the North Atlantic Ocean

Monday, August 9, 2021

New Volume: Balkan Yearbook of European and International Law

The latest volume of the Balkan Yearbook of European and International Law (Vol. 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Topic: 40 Years of CISG
    • Ben Köhler, For an Independent Development of the CISG Beyond Article 7 (2): A Stocktake and a Proposal
    • Marko Jovanović, Forever Young: The Gap-Filling Mechanism of the CISG As a Factor of Its Modernization
    • Jelena S. Perović Vujačić, Anticipatory Breach of Contract in Uniform Contract Law: Overview of the Solution of the UN Convention on the International Sale of Goods
    • Nevena Jevremović, CISG and Proactive Contracting: Suspending Performance Under Article 71 CISG in the Time of a Global Pandemic
    • Lok Kan So, Poomintr Sooksripaisarnkit, & Sai Ramani Garimella, COVID-19 in the Context of the CISG: Reconsidering the Concept of Hardship and Force Majeure
  • Agne Limante, The Western Balkans on the Way to the EU: Revisiting EU Conditionality
  • Bojana Todorović, The Story of the Civil Supervisor: A Missed Opportunity to Strengthen Civil Control of Public Procurement in the Republic of Serbia
  • Pavel Koukal, Tereza Kyselovská, & Zuzana Vlachová, Employment Contracts and the Law Applicable to the Right to a Patent: Czech Considerations
  • Apostolos Anthimos, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in the Field of Bilateral Conventions of Greece with Balkan States
  • Barbara Herceg Pakšić, Holding All the Aces? Hate Speech: Features and Suppression in Croatia
  • Virdzhiniya Petrova Georgieva, The Challenges of the World Health Organization: Lessons from the Outbreak of COVID-19
  • Nasir Muftić & Tahir Herenda, Sacrificing Privacy in the Fight Against Pandemics: How Far Is Too Far? Examples from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro

New Volume: Nigerian Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Nigerian Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 2018/2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade, New Reflections on Humankind as a Subject of International Law
  • David Baragwanath, Can the Law Respond to Threatened Apocalypse?
  • Howard Morrison, The Rule of International Law: Where Are We Going?
  • Osatohanmwen O. Anastasia Eruaga, Coastal State Regulation of the Use of Arms in the Private Protection of Commercial Vessels in the Gulf of Guinea: A Nigerian Perspective
  • Adaeze Okoye, Mariam Masini, & Alache Fisho, Joint Development of Transboundary Natural Resources: Lessons from the Nigeria-Sao Tome and Principe Joint Development Zone
  • Irekpitan Okukpon, Implementing Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)-based Electronic Waste Institutions in Nigeria: Lessons from the Global North
  • Amaka Vanni, The Participation of Pharmaceutical Drug Industry in Patent Governance and Law-Making: A Case Study of India and Nigeria
  • Chile Eboe-Osuji, The International Criminal Court: What Has It Accomplished?
  • Ivana Hrdličková, Adrian Plevin, & Amanda Fang, Improving the Efficiency of International Criminal Courts and Tribunals: The Paris Declaration on the Effectiveness of International Criminal Justice
  • Péter Kovács, The International Criminal Court on the Rohingyas’ Situation and the Early Scholarly Echo of the Decision
  • Daniel D. Ntanda Nsereko, The Law’s Response to the Plight of Victims of Trauma in the Context of International Criminal Justice
  • Caroline Omari Lichuma, TWAILing the Minimum Core Concept: Re-thinking the Minimum Core of Economic and Social Rights in the Third World
  • Olasupo Owoeye, Health and Development in Africa: How Far Can the Human Rights Jurisprudence Go?
  • Solomon Ukhuegbe & Alero I. Fenemigho, Determining the Termination of a Non-International Armed Conflict: An Analysis of the Boko Haram Insurgency in Northern Nigeria

Sunday, August 8, 2021

New Volume: Ocean Yearbook

The latest volume of the Ocean Yearbook (Vol. 35) is out. Contents include:
  • Martin Koehring, Karin Kemper & Peter Thomson, The Post-COVID-19 Ocean Economy: Building Back Bluer
  • Steven Haines, Developing Human Rights at Sea
  • J. Ashley Roach, The BBNJ Process: Gaps and Prospects for Success
  • Emilia Ganslandt & Peter Ricketts, Developing Trends in the Global Ocean and Ocean-Climate Change Nexus
  • Anastasia Christodoulou, Aspasia Pastra, Meinhard Doelle & Tafsir Johansson, Four Spheres of Influence from a Canadian Context: The Critical Role of Ports in Global Decarbonization Efforts
  • Peter Nuttall, Andrew Irvin, Alison Newell & Pierre-Jean Bordahandy, To Tax or Not to Tax: The Case for a 1.5 °C Carbon Price on International Shipping—Perspectives from the Climate Most Vulnerable Nations
  • Peter Nuttall, Working for the Spirit of Tony de Brum: “The Big Red Truck”—Benevolent Aid, Strategic Investment, Chequebook Climate Change Diplomacy or Neo-colonialism
  • Joeli Veitayaki, Peter Nuttall & Prerna Chand, Living Climate Change Impacts in Pacific SIDS: Articulating the Pacific Way in an Unresponsive World
  • Karen N. Scott, Does Aotearoa New Zealand Need an Oceans Policy for Modern Ocean Governance?
  • David Freestone & Clive Schofield, Sea Level Rise and Archipelagic States: A Preliminary Risk Assessment
  • Francesco Munari, To What Extent Do the Contemporary International Law of the Sea, International Maritime Law, and International Labor Law Address Public Health Threats such as Pandemics?
  • Nuwan Peiris, Bunkering in the Exclusive Economic Zone and on the High Seas under the Law of the Sea Convention: An Entangling Experiment with Saiga, Virginia G, Norstar and San Padre Pio
  • Jan Jakub Solski, Northern Sea Route Permit Scheme: Does Article 234 of UNCLOS Allow Prior Authorization?
  • Zhen Sun, UNCLOS Part XII and IMO Instruments on Regulating Environmental Impacts of Shipping: Towards an Effective Regulatory Synergy
  • Ziad Lawen, Prospects for the Delimitation of the Maritime Boundary between Lebanon and Israel: A Case Study
  • Gerard Domingue & Lucia Pierre, How the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission Addresses the IUU Fishing Challenge: Is It Working?
  • Daniel W. Dylan & Erin Chochla, The Clash of Civilizations: Whaling and the IWC’s Scientific Research and Aboriginal Subsistence Exceptions
  • Dikdik Mohamad Sodik, Combating Maritime Security Threats in Indonesian Waters: The Need for Legal and Institutional Framework Reforms
  • Eliya M. Baron Lopez, South Korean and Japanese Air Defense Identification Zone Claims over the Liancourt Rocks

Sunday, July 11, 2021

New Volume: Anuario Colombiano de Derecho Internacional

The latest volume of the Anuario Colombiano de Derecho Internacional (Vol. 14, 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Virdzhiniya Petrova Georgieva, Hierarchy between Domestic and International Tribunals: Utopia or Near Future?
  • Fabiola Jimenez Moran Sotomayor, La Autoridad Internacional de los Fondos Marinos y la explotación sostenible de la Zona
  • Jacqueline Hellman, ¿Se encuentra la obligación internacional de rescate en declive ante las políticas estatales de “puertos cerrados”?
  • Maria Andrea Bocanegra & Silvana Insignares Cera, Afectación de los derechos colectivos y de la seguridad alimentaria en el fallo de la Corte Internacional de Justicia caso Nicaragua c. Colombia
  • Ruth Abril Stoffels & Rosario Ojinaga Ruiz, Los procesos de desvinculación y reintegración de las niñas asociadas con fuerzas o grupos armados: “thinking outside the box”
  • Juan Sebastián Vera Sánchez, La cuestión probatoria de la falta de disposición cuando el Estado ha tenido el propósito de sustraer o blindar al individuo de su responsabilidad por los crímenes internacionales

New Volume: Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional

The latest volume of the Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional (Vol. 21, 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Doctrina
    • Gerhard Niedrist & Aida Figueroa Bello, Hacia una coordinación efectiva entre regímenes especializados para garantizar una interpretación armoniosa en el derecho internacional público moderno
    • Alejandro Sánchez González, The Interaction between Convergent and Divergent Approaches of Global Law in the Field of Business and Human Rights
    • Jesús E. Sanabria-Moyano, W. Ricardo Rodríguez-Beltrán, & R. E. Gutiérrez-Carvajal, Espacios convencionales de los derechos políticos en las sentencias de la Corte Interamericana a través de un sistema semiautomático de inteligencia artificial
    • Elizabeth Jiménez Mora, The Core Elements of Representative Democracy within Inter-American Law
    • Lucas Carlos Lima & Lucas Mendes Felippe, A expansão da jurisdição da Corte Interamericana de Direitos Humanos através de opiniões consultivas
    • Felipe Ignacio Paredes Paredes, Pueblos indígenas y tribales y derechos humanos en la jurisprudencia de la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos: una mirada crítica
    • Édgar Hernán Fuentes Contreras & Luz Eliyer Cárdenas Contreras, Deferencia a la soberanía nacional. Práctica y doctrina del margen de apreciación nacional en el Sistema Interamericano de Derechos Humanos
    • Amael Notini Moreira Bahia, A definição de cursos d’água internacionais e o caso Silala
    • María Ángela Sasaki Otani, El derecho internacional de aguas desde una perspectiva latinoamericana: ¿convenciones universales, acuerdos regionales o mantener el statu quo en la región?
    • Ricardo Abello-Galvis & Walter Arévalo-Ramírez, La inmunidad de las organizaciones internacionales y de sus funcionarios cuando son nacionales del Estado sede. Diferencias con la inmunidad diplomática y experiencias de la jurisprudencia internacional y colombiana
    • Vinicius Hsu Cleto, O fundamento do direito internacional público: uma releitura da Vereinbarung
    • Juan Carlos Velázquez Elizarrarás, Derecho internacional penal o derecho penal internacional: una discusión ociosa, a la luz de los principios establecidos en el Estatuto de Roma
    • Davorin Lapaš, Sanctioning International Terrorist Organizations (ITOs): The Changing Paradigm of International Legal Personality?
    • Xavier J. Ramírez García de León, Requirement of Mens Rea for War Crimes in the Light of the Development of Autonomous Weapons Systems
  • Comentarios
    • María Helena Carbonell Yánez, Teorías relativas al cumplimiento del derecho internacional público
    • André Luiz Valim Vieira, Pacifismo e guerra no pensamento político internacional e a construção de um direito humano e fundamental à paz
    • Ana M. Jara Gómez, Kosovo’s Constitutionalism and Some Notes on the Legitimacy of the Spanish Position
    • Alexis Rodrigo Laborías, La controversia por el vertedero de residuos en la Cordillera de los Andes. Un estudio de caso acerca de la responsabilidad internacional por daño transfronterizo
    • Gabriel Ferrer Ortega, Los primeros arbitrajes internacionales en materia ambiental
    • Nuria González Martín, Birthright citizenship: reflexiones en torno a familias, menores y la nacionalidad por derecho de nacimiento en los Estados Unidos de América
    • David Moussali Cole, ¿Son los Estados Unidos un paraíso fiscal?
    • Rodrigo Lobato Oliveira de Souza, A multifacetária legitimidade da Soft Law e o caso do Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
    • Daniel Ángel Borrillo & Víctor Luis Gutiérrez Castillo, Hacia un análisis sistémico del proceso probatorio en materia de asilo por motivo de orientación sexual e identidad de género en el derecho común europeo
    • Pietro Sferrazza Taibi, Comentarios a los Principios Rectores para la Búsqueda de Personas Desaparecidas del Comité contra las Desapariciones Forzadas de Naciones Unidas
    • Felipe Augusto Lopes Carvalho, Proteção multinível da liberdade sexual: crime de violação no direito internacional e o caso Bemba Gombo
    • Claudia Regina de Oliveira Magalhães da Silva Loureiro, acklash contra o sistema interamericano de direitos humanos. Uma análise sobre o caso Venezuela
    • Natalia Beltrán Orjuela & Leydi Marcela Palacios Segura, Estándares convencionales en procedimientos de personas migrantes
    • Renata Bregaglio Lazarte & Paula Camino Morgado, Problemas en la frontera: retos migratorios en el Perú desde un enfoque interseccional de discapacidad
  • Coyuntura Internacional
    • Elena C. Díaz Galán, El Acuerdo de Paz para Colombia. Un singular mecanismo de consolidación de la paz

Thursday, June 3, 2021

New Volume: Austrian Review of International and European Law

The latest volume of the Austrian Review of International and European Law (Vol. 24, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • 50 Years Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
    • Christina Binder & August Reinisch, 50 Years Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties’
    • Helmut Tichy, Introductory Remarks
    • Axel Marschik, The Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties and Karl Zemanek – A Preamble of Sorts
    • Hanspeter Neuhold, The Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties at 50: Issues at the Vienna Codification Conference
    • Veronika Bílková, Worlds Apart? Interpretation of International Criminal Law and International Human Rights Law Treaties and the VCLT
    • Georg Nolte, Still Setting the Frame: The Vienna Convention’s Rules on Treaty Interpretation in the Light of the ILC Conclusions on Subsequent Agreements and Subsequent Practice
    • Gerhard Hafner, Provisional Application of Treaties
    • Christina Binder, The VCLT over the Last 50 Years: Developments in the Law of Treaties with a Special Focus on the VCLT’s Rules on Treaty Termination
    • Dire Tladi, The ILC’s Draft Conclusions on Peremptory Norms of General International Law: Personal Reflections of the Special Rapporteur
    • Hélène Ruiz Fabri, The Eternal Question of Ius Cogens Running Into Procedural Hurdles

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

New Volume: Japanese Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Japanese Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 63, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Creation and Maintenance of Effective International Orders: Closely Intertwining Multilateralism, Regionalism, Bilateralism, and Unilateralism
    • Atsuko Kanehara, Introductory Note
    • Jaemin Lee, One Step Backward for Two Steps Forward: Rethinking Multilateralism in Global Trade
    • Emmanuel Decaux, International Human Rights Protection: Top Down v. Bottom Up
    • Atsuko Kanehara, Interplay Between the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and Other International Law for Building a Comprehensive International Maritime Order
    • Takeo Horiguchi, Emerging Soft Control on States’ Minilateral Climate Actions Under the Global UN Climate Regime in the Era of the Paris Agreement
  • Dynamism and Multilateralism in Alternative Dispute Resolution in Asia
    • Yuko Nishitani, Introductory Note
    • Anselmo Reyes, Recourse Against Awards, Applications to Resist Enforcement and Tactical Considerations: Some Lessons from Singapore and Hong Kong Law
    • Weixia Gu, Multi-Tier Approaches and Global Dispute Resolution
  • Culture and International Law: A Comprehensive Analysis: Part Two
    • Yasuzo Kitamura, Cultural Diversity in International Human Rights Law: Toward a Comprehensive Approach for Marginalized People
  • Private International Law
    • Mari Nagata, Current Status and Issues of Implementing the Hague Child Abduction Convention in Japan
  • Japanese Digest of International Law
    • Junichi Eto & Atsuko Kanehara, Japan’s Amendment of the Nature Conservation Act that Provides for the Establishment of Marine Protected Areas on the Seabed
    • Masahiko Asada, Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and Japan

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

New Volume: Yearbook of International Disaster Law

The latest volume of the Yearbook of International Disaster Law (Vol. 2, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Thematic Section: ‘Disasters and …: Exploring New Areas of Research’
    • Giovanna Adinolfi, Strengthening Resilience to Disasters through International Trade Law: the Role of WTO Agreements on Trade in Goods
    • Giulio Bartolini, Global Animal Law and Disasters
    • Upendra Baxi, Disasters, Catastrophes and Oblivion: a TWAIL Perspective
    • Daniel A. Farber, The Intersection of International Disaster Law and Climate Change Law
    • Harald Koch, Disasters and Private International Law: Reasserting Legal Governance beyond the Nation State
    • Gabrielle Simm, Disasters and Gender: Sexing International Disaster Law
    • Jonathan Todres, Children and Disasters: the Essential Role of Children’s Rights Law
    • Simon Whitbourn, ‘I Must Go Down to the Seas Again’: the Evolution of International Maritime Disaster Law and Its Lessons for the Development of a General Disaster Law Framework
    • Flavia Zorzi Giustiniani, Protecting World Cultural and Natural Heritage against Climate Change and Disasters: an Assessment of the Effectiveness of the World Heritage Convention System
  • General Section
    • Gian Luca Burci & Mark Eccleston-Turner, Preparing for the Next Pandemic: the International Health Regulations and World Health Organization during COVID-19
    • Sandrine Maljean-Dubois, Was the Global Pact for the Environment a Good Idea?
    • Natalie Baird, Disasters, Human Rights and Vulnerability: Reflections from the Experiences of Older Persons in Post-Quake Canterbury
    • Miki Ishimori, Rights-based Approach to Nuclear Damage Compensation: Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Revisited

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

New Volume: South African Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the South African Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 44, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Elijah Sibanda, An Analysis of the Execution of Judgments and Follow-up Mechanism Under the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights: Lessons from the European Human Rights System
  • Ashraf Booley & Jacqueline van Schalkwyk, The Legal and Social Complexities Relating to Self-Determination: Internal and External Self-Determination and Obligation Erga Omnes
  • Bright Kojo Nkrumah, The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and South Africans with Albinism: A Commentary
  • Lindelwa Beaulender Mhlongo, Of Politics and Law: Analysing the Implications of the US-China Trade War on International Law and International Trade Law
  • Stuart Casey-Maslen & Brenda Mwale, The Prohibition of Cyberterrorism as a Method of Warfare in International Law
  • Noluthando Ncame, The Enigmatic Principle of Complementarity: A Negotiated Machinery for Implementing International Criminal Law
  • Dunia Prince Zongwe, A Chronicle of How Judges Have Internalised International Law in Namibia
  • Dayo Ayoade, Towards ‘Free, Prior, Informed Consent’ in Natural Resource Development Projects

Monday, January 25, 2021

New Volume: Spanish Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Spanish Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 24, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • The Classics’ Corner
    • Alejandro Rodríguez Carrión, International Law on the Threshold of the 21st Century
  • Special contribution
    • Antonio Remiro Brotóns, The Declaration of Principles turns fifty years: a rondó of sly power
  • General Articles
    • Marco Longobardo, «Super-Robust» Peacekeeping Mandates In Non-International Armed Conflicts Under International Law
    • Miguel Checa Martínez, Brexit And Private International Law: Looking Forward From The UK But Actually Going Backward
    • Alexis Berg-Rodríguez, Back On The Good Track: Historical Institutionalism And The New Political Model Between The Eu And Cuba
    • Chema Suárez Serrano, From Bullets To Fake News: Disinformation As A Weapon Of Mass Distraction. What Solutions Does International Law Provide?
    • Nerea Magallón Elósegui, Trade In Minerals And Human Rights: Towards Responsible Sourcing Of Minerals From Conflict Areas In Europe (Regulation (EU) 2017/821)
    • Jerónimo Maillo, New Screening Of Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) In Europe: A First Step Towards A New Paradigm?
    • Ignacio Forcada Barona, Brexit And European Citizenship: Welcome Back To International Law
    • Libia Arenal, Economic Crimes Against Humanity: A Legal Challenge For The Positive Regulation Of Crimes Against Humanity In Article 7 Of The Rome Statute
  • Catalonia Secession before the Spanish Supreme Court
    • Araceli Mangas Martín, A Decent Supreme Court Judgement
    • Pedro Tent Alonso, Assessment, In Light Of EU Law, Of The Constitutional Framework From Which The Spanish Supreme Court Has Approached The Prosecution Of Catalan Separatist Leaders
    • Helena Torroja Mateu, The «Right To Decide» In International Law As Ground For Exclusion Of Unlawfullness
    • Santiago Ripol Carulla & Rafael Arenas García, Issues Related To European Human Rights Law: The European Court Of Human Rights
    • Javier Roldán Barbero, The Catalonia Independence Process And EU Law (2017-2020)

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

New Volume: Netherlands Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 50, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Yearbooks in International Law: History, Function and Future
    • Otto Spijkers, Wouter G. Werner & Ramses A. Wessel, The Phenomenon of Yearbooks in International Law: An Introduction
    • Matilda Arvidsson, The ‘Turn to History’ and the Year of the Yearbook of International Law
    • John D. Haskell, A Case in the Politics of Form: Yearbooks of International Law
    • Sara Kendall, Archiving Legality: The Imperial Emergence of the International Law Yearbook
    • Jan Klabbers, On Yearbooks
    • Part II Contributions by Yearbooks of International Law Fatsah Ouguergouz, African Yearbook of International Law: A Quarter-Century of Contribution to the Development and Dissemination of International Law
    • Donald R. Rothwell, Australian Year Book of International Law
    • John H. Currie, The Canadian Yearbook of International Law/Annuaire canadien de droit international: Founding, Function, Future
    • Ying-jeou Ma, Chun-i Chen & Pasha L. Hsieh, Chinese (Taiwan) Yearbook of International Law and Affairs: Contributing to the Grotian Moment in Asia
    • Pavel Šturma, Czech Yearbook of Public and Private International Law on the Occasion of Its 10th Anniversary: Achievements and Perspectives
    • Zeray Yihdego, Melaku Desta & Martha Belete, Ethiopian Yearbook of International Law: Towards Diversifying and Democratizing Voices in the Making and Development of International Law
    • Tuomas Tiittala, Finnish Yearbook of International Law—Past, Present, and Future
    • Mathias Forteau, Annuaire Français de Droit International .................... 137 Andreas von Arnauld & Daley J. Birkett, German Yearbook of International Law: Origins, Development, Prospects
    • Marcel Szabó, The Past, Present and Future of the Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law—An Evolving Story
    • Arie Afriansyah & Hadi Rahmat Purnama, Indonesia and the Absence of a Yearbook on International Law
    • Riccardo Pavoni, Italian Yearbook of International Law: Genesis, Development and Prospects
    • Keiichiro Niikura & Koichi Morikawa, The Development and Future of the Japanese Yearbook of International Law: From Japanese Perspectives to International Academic Forums
    • Manuel Becerra-Ramirez, Mexican Yearbook of International Law: A Concept for Researching, Disseminating, and Teaching International Law
    • Otto Spijkers & Dimitri Van Den Meerssche, ‘There Was an Idealism that This Information is Useful’—The Origins and Evolution of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law
    • Ata R. Hindi, The Palestine Yearbook of International Law: A Medium for a Principled International Law on Palestine and the Palestinian People
    • Lukasz Gruszczynski & Karolina Wierczyńska, Polish Yearbook of International Law: A History of Constant Change and Adaptation
    • Eugenia López-Jacoiste & María José Cervell Hortal, Anuario Español de Derecho Internacional: History, Functions and Future

Saturday, December 26, 2020

New Volume: Yearbook of Polar Law

The latest volume of the Yearbook of Polar Law (Vol. 12, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Guy Green, Celebration of 60th Anniversary of Adoption of the Antarctic Treaty
  • Marie Jacobsson, The Fundamental Principles of Polar Law
  • David Leary, Blue Ice, Meteorites, Fossil Penguins and Rare Minerals: The Case for Enhanced Protection of Antarctica’s Unique Geoheritage – An International Legal Analysis
  • Katharina Heinrich, Biological Prospecting in Antarctica – A Solution-Based Approach to Regulating the Collection and Use of Antarctic Marine Biodiversity by Taking the BBNJ Process into Account
  • Osamu Inagaki, Legal Issues concerning DROMLAN under the Antarctic Treaty System
  • Sakiko Hataya, Legal Implications of China’s Proposal for an Antarctic Specially Managed Area (ASMA) at Kunlun Station at Dome A
  • Trevor Daya-Winterbottom, An Overview of the Antarctic Treaty System and Applicable New Zealand Law
  • Xueping Li, The Déjà vu System of International Trusteeship in Continental Antarctica: A Textual Analysis
  • Lynda Goldsworthy, Finding the ‘Conservation’ in the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources
  • Denzil Miller & Elise Murray, Compliance Evaluation and Sustainable Resource Management in the CCAMLR
  • Alan D. Hemmings, Challenges to Substantive Demilitarisation in the Antarctic Treaty Area
  • Timo Koivurova, Lessons from the Finland’s Chairmanship of the Arctic Council: What Will Happen with the Arctic Council and in General Arctic Governance
  • Andrew Serdy, The Long Grass at the North Pole
  • Jan Jakub Solski, New Russian Legislative Approaches and Navigational Rights within the Northern Sea Route
  • Barry S. Zellen, Global Co-management and the Emergent Arctic: Opportunities for Engagement and Collaboration between Arctic States, Indigenous Permanent Participants, and Observers on the Arctic Council
  • Jóhann Sigurjónsson, Some Icelandic Perspectives on the Agreement to Prevent Unregulated High Seas Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean
  • Hema Nadarajah, Prevalence of Soft Law in the Arctic
  • Rachael Lorna Johnstone, From the Indian Ocean to the Arctic: What the Chagos Archipelago Advisory Opinion Tells Us about Greenland
  • Romain Chuffart, Sakiko Hataya, Osamu Inagaki, & Lindsay Arthur, Assessing Japan’s Arctic Engagement during the ArCS Project (2015–2020)
  • Johnny Grøneng Aase, Henrik Hyndøy, Agnar Tveten, Ingrid Hjulstad Johansen, Hege Imsen, Eirik Veum Wilhelmsen, Trude Duelien Skorge, Alfred Ingvar Halstensen, Arne Johan Ulven, & Jon Magnus Haga, The Polar Code and Telemedicine
  • Anna Petrétei, Corporate Behaviour towards the Upholding of Human Rights – Exploring the Possibilities of Human Rights Impact Assessment in the Sápmi Region
  • Yu Cao, Communities’ Reflections on Oil Companies’ Corporate Social Responsibility Activities in Utqiaġvik, Alaska
  • Alexandra L. Carleton, Ethics of Observation in the Polar Regions
  • Edythe E. Weeks, Lessons from International Space Law: The Role of International Relations in Governing Global Commons Regions

Thursday, December 24, 2020

New Volume: Baltic Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Baltic Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 18, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Juha Raitio, The “Thick” Rule of Law and Mutual Trust in the European Union
  • Thomas Hoffmann, The Impact of Digital Autonomous Tools on Private Autonomy
  • Peter Rott, Powerful Private Players in the Digital Economy: Between Private Law Freedoms and the Constitutional Principle of Equality
  • Juan Luis Manfredi Sánchez, Big Data and International Politics
  • Éva Miskolczi-Bodnár, Big Data and Competition Policy in the European Union
  • John M. Yun, Antitrust After Big Data
  • Andris Tauriņš, Big Data Ownership: Do we Need a New Regulatory Framework?
  • Ana Vlahek, Development of Consumer Collective Redress in the EU: a Light at the End of the Tunnel?
  • Carlos Llorente, Consumer Protection in the EU Conflict-of-laws Framework
  • Klemen Podobnik, Geo – blocking Regulation: Antitrust or Consumer Protection?

New Volume: Hague Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Hague Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 30, 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Georgios A. Serghides, The Principle of Effectiveness in the European Convention on Human Rights, in Particular its Relationship to the other Convention Principles
  • Facundo M. Gómez Pulisich, L’analyse de la question de l’extinction des traités comme résultat de la survenance d’une nouvelle norme impérative (jus cogens superveniens)
  • Donette Murray, Flawed and Unnecessary: the ‘Unwilling or Unable’ Doctrine Pertaining to States’ Use of Force in Self-Defence against Non-State Actors
  • Yannick Weber, United Nations Security Council Resolutions and the European Court of Human Rights: Conflict or Systemic Integration? A Case Study of Switzerland
  • Janja Hojnik, Individuals’ Right to Property under International Succession Law: Reimbursement of Bank Deposits after the Collapse of the SFR Yugoslavia

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

New Volume: European Investment Law and Arbitration Review

The latest volume of the European Investment Law and Arbitration Review (Vol. 5, 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Sarah Z. Vasani & Nathalie Allen, No Green without More Green: The Importance of Protecting FDI through International Investment Law to Meet the Climate Change Challenge
  • Elizabeth Chan, The UK’s Post-Brexit Investment Policy: An Opportunity for New Design Choices
  • Alexander G. Leventhal & Akshay Shreedhar, The European Commission: Ami Fidèle or Faux Ami? Exploring the Commission’s Role as Amicus Curiae in ICSID Proceedings
  • Brady Gordon, A Sceptical Analysis of the Enforcement of ISDS Awards in the EU Following the Decision of the CJEU on CETA
  • David Sandberg & Jacob Rosell Svensson, Achmea and the Implications for Challenge Proceedings before National Courts
  • Samantha J. Rowe & Nelson Goh, Resolving Perceived Norm Conflict through Principles of Treaty Interpretation: The January 2019 EU Member States’ Declarations
  • Nikos Lavranos, The World after the Termination of Intra-EU BIT S
  • Crawford Jamieson, Assessing the CJEU’S Decisions in Achmea and Opinion 1/17 in Light of the proposed Multilateral Investment Court – Winner of the Essay Competition 2020
  • Robert Bradshaw, Legal Stability and Legitimate Expectations: Does International Investment Law Need a Sense of Proportion? – Joint 2nd Prize Winner of the Essay Competition 2020
  • Florence Humblet & Kabir Duggal, If You Are Not Part of the Solution, You Are the Problem: Article 37 of the EU Charter as a Defence for Climate Change and Environmental Measures in Investor-State Arbitrations – Joint 2nd Prize Winner Essay competition 2020
  • Cees Verburg, The Hague Court of Appeal Reinstates the Yukos Awards
  • Bianca McDonnell, Theodoros Adamakopoulos and Others v. Republic of Cyprus, ICSID Case No ARB/15/49, Decision on Jurisdiction, 7 February 2020
  • Alesia Tsiabus & Guillaume Croisant, Investment Arbitration and EU (Competition) Law – Lessons Learned from the Micula Saga
  • Laura Rees-Evans, The Protection of the Environment in International Investment Agreements – Recent Developments and Prospects for Reform
  • Crina Baltag, Investment Arbitration and Police Powers: Emerging Issues
  • Anna Bilanová, Environmental Counterclaims in Investment Arbitration
  • Gaurav Sharma, Environmental Claims by States in Investment Treaty Arbitration
  • Nikos Lavranos, The (ab)use of Third-Party Submissions
  • Meg Kinnear, ADR in Investment Disputes: The Role of Complementary Mechanisms — Keynote to the 5th EFILA Annual Conference 2020
  • Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, The Proliferation of Courts and Tribunals: Navigating Multiple Proceedings – 5th EFILA Annual Lecture 2019

New Volume: Canadian Yearbook of International Law

The latest volume of the Canadian Yearbook of International Law (Vol. 57, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Frédéric Mégret, “Do Not Do Abroad What You Would Not Do at Home?”: An Exploration of the Rationales for Extraterritorial Criminal Jurisdiction over a State’s Nationals
    • Manuel Galvis Martinez, Defection and Prisoner of War Status: Protection under International Humanitarian Law for Those Who Join the Enemy?
    • Jean d’Aspremont, Comparativism and Colonizing Thinking in International Law
    • Bernard Duhaime & Andréanne Thibault, Contestation sociale, liberté de réunion pacifique et d’association: quelles leçons tirer des expériences interaméricaines?
    • Yunus Emre Acikgonul & Edward R. Lucas, Developments in Maritime Delimitation Law over the Last Decade: Emerging Principles in Modern Case Law
    • Geneviève Dufour & Delphine Ducasse, “America First” and the Return of Economic Isolationism and Nationalism to the United States: A Historic Turning Point for International Trade Law
    • José Manuel Velasco Retamosa, Commercial Use of the Emblems of International Bodies: The Case of the International Committee of the Red Cross
    • Charis Kamphuis, The Transnational Mining Justice Movement: Reflecting on Two Decades of Law Reform Activism in the Americas
    • Sandrine W. De Herdt & Tafsir Malick Ndiaye, The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and the Protection and Preservation of the Marine Environment: Taking Stock and Prospects