23 septembre 2020

REVUE : Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 33, n°3, September 2020)

Eric de BRABANDERE, Ingo VENZKE 

The latest issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law (vol. 33, n°3, September 2020) is out.


Editorial
Elies van Sliedregt, International outlaws
International Legal Theory

Juan Pablo Scarfi, Denaturalizing the Monroe Doctrine: The Rise of Latin American Legal Anti-imperialism in the Face of the Modern US and Hemispheric Redefinition of the Monroe Doctrine

Nicolás M. Perrone, Speed, Law and the Global Economy: How Economic Acceleration Contributes to Inequality and Precarity 

 International Law and Practice

Rosana Deplano, The Parliament of the World? Reflections on the Proposal to Establish a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly

Vladislava Stoyanova, Fault, Knowledge and Risk within the Framework of Positive Obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights

Marco Pertile & Sondra Faccio, What We Talk About When We Talk About Jerusalem: The Duty of Non-recognition and the Prospects for Peace after the US Embassy’s Relocation to the Holy City

Eliana Cusato, International Law, the Paradox of Plenty and the Making of Resource-Driven Conflict

Juan Pablo Perez-Leon-Acevedo, The Control of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights over Amnesty Laws and Other Exemption Measures: Legitimacy Assessment

Pasha L. Hsieh, Rethinking Non-Recognition: The EU’s Investment Agreement with Taiwan under the One-China Policy

Francesca Capone, The Alleged Tension between the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration and State Sovereignty: ‘Much Ado about Nothing’?

Marika Sosnowski, ‘Not dead but sleeping’: Expanding International Law to Better Regulate the Diverse Effects of Ceasefire Agreements

Irma Johanna Mosquera Valderrama, BEPS Principal Purpose Test and Customary International Law

International Court of Justice 

Felix Fouchard, Allowing ‘leeway to expediency, without abandoning principle’? The International Court of Justice’s use of Avoidance Techniques   

International Criminal Courts and Tribunals 

Nicola Palmer, International Criminal Law and Border Control: The Expressive Role of the Deportation and Extradition of Genocide Suspects to Rwanda

 



Aucun commentaire :

Enregistrer un commentaire