The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (vol. 26, n°2, May 2015) is out. Contents include:
- Editorial
- JHHW, The Spitzenkandidaten Exercise One Year Later – The Unsung Hero; The Ballad of Google Spain; On My Way Out – Advice to Young Scholars I: Presenting a Paper in an International (and National) Conference; In this Issue
- Articles
- Bernard M. Hoekman & Petros C. Mavroidis, WTO ‘à la carte’ or ‘menu du jour’? Assessing the Case for More Plurilateral Agreements
- Kirsty Gover, Settler–State Political Theory, ‘CANZUS’ and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
- Ilias Bantekas, Land Rights in Nineteenth-Century Ottoman State Succession Treaties
- Oren Perez, The Hybrid Legal-Scientific Dynamic of Transnational Scientific Institutions
- Stefan Talmon, Determining Customary International Law: The ICJ’s Methodology between Induction, Deduction and Assertion
- New Voices: A Selection from the Third Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law
- Guy Fiti Sinclair, State Formation, Liberal Reform and the Growth of International Organizations
- Ilias Plakokefalos, Causation in the Law of State Responsibility and the Problem of Overdetermination: In Search of Clarity
- Daniel Joyce, Internet Freedom and Human Rights
- Roaming Charges: Doctoral Dissertation by Hans Kelsen – A Transgenerational Conversation
- Critical Review of International Governance
- Sungjoon Cho & Thomas H. Lee, Double Remedies in Double Courts
- Review Essay
- Mónica García-Salmones Rovira Faith, Ritual and Rebellion in 21st Century (Positivist) International Law
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