7 septembre 2018

REVUE : Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 31, n° 3, September 2018)

Catherine MAIA

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 31, n° 3, September 2018) is out.


Editorial
Eric De Brabandere, International Dispute Settlement – from Practice to Legal Discipline
International Legal Theory: Symposium on "Imperial Locations"
Martti Koskenniemi, Less is More: Legal Imagination in Context
Lauren Benton, Made in Empire: Finding the History of International Law in Imperial Locations
Kerry Rittich, Occupied Iraq: Imperial Convergences?
Rose Parfitt, Fascism, Imperialism and International Law: An Arch Met a Motorway and the Rest is History . . .
Luis Eslava, The Moving Location of Empire: Indirect Rule, International Law, and the Bantu Educational Kinema Experiment
Luigi Nuzzo, The Birth of an Imperial Location: Comparative Perspectives on Western Colonialism in China
Liliana Obregon, Empire, Racial Capitalism and International Law: The Case of Manumitted Haiti and the Recognition Debt
International Law and Practice
Kathryn Greenman, Aliens in Latin America: Intervention, Arbitration and State Responsibility for Rebels
Hague International Tribunals: International Court of Justice
Massimo Lando, Plausibility in the Provisional Measures Jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice
International Criminal Courts And Tribunals
Cheah W.L. & Moritz Vormbaum, British War Crimes Trials in Europe and Asia, 1945–1949: A Comparative Study
Lachezar Yanev, On Common Plans and Excess Crimes: Fragmenting the Notion of Co-Perpetration in International Criminal Law



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