21 novembre 2018

REVUE : Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 31, n°4, December 2018)

Catherine MAIA

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 31, n°4, December 2018) is out.


Editorial
Seline Trevisanut, News Coverage by Scholarship 
International Legal Theory 
Martin Clark, Ambivalence, anxieties / Adaptations, advances: Conceptual History and International Law
Roger Merino, Reimagining the Nation-State: Indigenous Peoples and the Making of Plurinationalism in Latin America
Ming-Sung Kuo, Resolving the Question of Inter-Scalar Legitimacy into Law? A Hard Look at Proportionality Balancing in Global Governance 
International Legal Theory: Symposium on the ‘Trajectories of International Legal Histories’ 
Gerry Simpson, Introduction to Symposium on the Trajectories of International Legal Histories: Doing Things Differently There
Felix Lange, Challenging the Paris Peace Treaties, State Sovereignty, and Western-Dominated 
International Law – The Multifaceted Genesis of the Jus Cogens Doctrine 
Guy Fiti Sinclair, Towards a Postcolonial Genealogy of International Organizations Law
Julia Dehm, Highlighting Inequalities in the Histories of Human Rights: Contestations over Justice, Needs and Rights in the 1970s
Jakob Zollmann, African International Legal Histories – International Law in Africa: Perspectives and Possibilities 
International Law and Practice 
Shu Shang & Wei Shen, When the State Sovereign Immunity Rule Meets Sovereign Wealth Funds in the Post Financial Crisis Era: Is There Still a Black Hole in International Law?
International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
Birju Kotecha, The Art of Rhetoric: Perceptions of the International Criminal Court and Legalism
Nora Stappert, A New Influence of Legal Scholars? The Use of Academic Writings at International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
Michail Vagias, The Prosecutor’s Request Concerning the Rohingya Deportation to Bangladesh: Certain Procedural Questions




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