Tuesday, July 11, 2017

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28, no. 2, May 2017) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, On My Way Out – Advice to Young Scholars V: Writing References; In this Issue
  • Articles
    • Niels Petersen, The International Court of Justice and the Judicial Politics of Identifying Customary International Law
    • Bernard Hoekman & Petros C. Mavroidis, MFN Clubs and Scheduling Additional Commitments in the GATT: Learning from the GATS
    • Janis Grzybowski, To Be or Not to Be: The Ontological Predicament of State Creation in International Law
    • Noëlle Quénivet, Does and Should International Law Prohibit the Prosecution of Children for War Crimes?
    • Yota Negishi, The Pro Homine Principle’s Role in Regulating the Relationship between Conventionality Control and Constitutionality Control
  • Focus: International Legal Histories – A Look Back to the Twentieth Century
    • Giovanni Mantilla, Conforming Instrumentalists: Why the United States and the United Kingdom Joined the 1949 Geneva Conventions
    • Narrelle Morris & Aden Knaap, When Institutional Design is Flawed: Problems of Cooperation at the United Nations War Crimes Commission, 1943-1948
    • Felix Lange, Between Systematization and Expertise for Foreign Policy: The Practice-Oriented Approach in Germany’s International Legal Scholarship (1920–1980)
  • Roaming Charges
    • Viorica Vita, Selling Love Locks in Rome
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct
    • Ilias Plakokefalos, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: A Reply to Vladyslav Lanovoy
    • Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: Rejoinder
  • Critical Review of International Governance
    • Moria Paz, The Law of Walls
  • Review Essay
    • Outi Korhonen, Within and Beyond Interdisciplinarity in International Law and Human Rights. Review of Moshe Hirsch, Invitation to the Sociology of International Law and Pamela Slotte and Miia Halme-Tuomisaari (eds), Revisiting the Origins of Human Rights