New Issue of EJIL (Vol. 28 (2017) No. 2) – Published
The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 28 (2017) No. 2) is out today. As usual, the table of contents of the new issue is available at EJIL’s own website, where readers can access those articles that are freely available without subscription. The free access article in this issue is Niels Petersen’s The International Court of Justice and the Judicial Politics of Identifying Customary International Law. EJIL subscribers have full access to the latest issue of the journal at EJIL’s Oxford University Press site. Apart from articles published in the last 12 months, EJIL articles are freely available on the EJIL website.
Editorial
On My Way Out – Advice to Young Scholars V: Writing References; In this Issue
Articles
Niels Petersen, The International Court of Justice and the Judicial Politics of Identifying Customary International Law
Bernard Hoekman and Petros C. Mavroidis, MFN Clubs and Scheduling Additional Commitments in the GATT: Learning from the GATS
Janis Grzybowski, To Be or Not to Be: The Ontological Predicament of State Creation in International Law
Noëlle Quénivet, Does and Should International Law Prohibit the Prosecution of Children for War Crimes?
Yota Negishi, The Pro Homine Principle’s Role in Regulating the Relationship between Conventionality Control and Constitutionality Control
Focus: International Legal Histories – A Look Back to the Twentieth Century
Giovanni Mantilla, Conforming Instrumentalists: Why the United States and the United Kingdom Joined the 1949 Geneva Conventions
Narrelle Morris and Aden Knaap, When Institutional Design is Flawed: Problems of Cooperation at the United Nations War Crimes Commission, 1943-1948
Felix Lange, Between Systematization and Expertise for Foreign Policy: The Practice-Oriented Approach in Germany’s International Legal Scholarship (1920–1980)
Roaming Charges
Viorica Vita, Selling Love Locks in Rome
EJIL: Debate!
Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct
Ilias Plakokefalos, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: A Reply to Vladyslav Lanovoy
Vladyslav Lanovoy, The Use of Force by Non-State Actors and the Limits of Attribution of Conduct: Rejoinder
Critical Review of International Governance
Moria Paz, The Law of Walls
Review Essay
Outi Korhonen, Within and Beyond Interdisciplinarity in International Law and Human Rights. Review of Moshe Hirsch, Invitation to the Sociology of International Law and Pamela Slotte and Miia Halme-Tuomisaari (eds), Revisiting the Origins of Human Rights
Book Reviews
Itamar Mann. Humanity at Sea: Maritime Migration and the Foundations of International Law (Dana Schmalz)
Andrea Bianchi, Daniel Peat and Matthew Windsor (eds). Interpretation in International Law (Christian Djeffal)
Mathias Albert. A Theory of World Politics (Lando Kirchmair)
The Last Page
Gregory Shaffer, Khund
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