The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (vol. 29, n°1, 2018) is out.
Editorial
A Court that Dare Not Speak its Name: Human Rights at the Court of Justice; Vital Statistics; Time for Change: With Thanks to Guy Fiti Sinclair; In this IssueThe EJIL Foreword
Eyal Benvenisti, Upholding Democracy amid the Challenges of New Technology: What Role for the Law of Global Governance?Articles
Wolfgang Alschner, Damien Charlotin, The Growing Complexity of the International Court of Justice’s Self-Citation NetworkFocus: International Economic Law
Hendrik Simon, The Myth of Liberum Ius ad Bellum– Forgotten Disputes about Justifying War in 19th Century International Legal Discourse
Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral, A Short History of International Law Journals (1869–2017)
Sungjoon Cho, Jürgen Kurtz, Convergence and Divergence in International Economic Law and PoliticsRoaming Charges
Christopher Vajda, The EU and Beyond: Dispute Resolution in International Economic Agreements
Roaming Charges: Manila: More than One Way to HeavenSymposium: International Law and the First World War - International Law before 1914 and the Outbreak of War
Gabriela Frei, International Law and the First World War: IntroductionCritical Review of International Governance
Jochen von Bernstorff, Violence and International Law before 1914: On Imperial Ordering and the Ontology of the Nation State
Alan Desmond, The Private Life of Family Matters: Curtailing Human Rights Protection for Migrants under Article 8 ECHR?Review Essay
Charlotte Peevers, Liberal Internationalism, Radical Transformation and the Making of World Orders. Review of Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro, The Internationalists: How a Radical Plan to Outlaw War Remade the WorldBook Reviews
Jan Klabbers, reviewing Manfred Nowak, Human Rights or Global Capitalism: The Limits of PrivatizationThe Last Page
Alina Miron, reviewing Nathalie Clarenc, La suspension des engagements internationaux
Paolo Palchetti, reviewing Florian Couveinhes Matsumoto and Raphaëlle Nollez-Goldbach eds., Les motifs non-juridiques des jugements internationaux
Wolfgang Münch, reviewing Joachim Müller ed., Reforming the United Nations: A Chronology
Stephen Haven, Monolith
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