ISSN: 1540-1650, EISSN: 1746-9937
The Chinese Journal of International Law is the leading forum for articles on international law by Chinese scholars and on international law issues relating to China.
An independent, peer-reviewed research journal edited primarily by scholars from mainland China, and published in association with the Chinese Society of International Law, Beijing, and Wuhan University Institute of International Law, Wuhan, the Journal is a general international law journal with a focus on materials and viewpoints from and/or about China, other parts of Asia, and the broader developing world.
CONTENIDO
Articles
Editor’s Choice
Democracy Under The Influence: Paradigms of State Responsibility for Cyber Influence Operations on Elections
Barrie Sander
China and the Northwest Passage
Michael Byers; Emma Lodge
Reflections on the Presence of Third States in International Maritime Boundary Delimitation
Qi Xu
Can a Change of Circumstances Qualify as an Impediment under Article 79 of the CISG?
Sang Man Kim; Jongho Kim
Comments
International Jurisprudence Concerning the Group or Unity Principle in Territorial Allocation
Xuechan Ma
The Implementation of International Law on the Equal Right of Labor of Transgender Minorities in China: Revisiting the Mr. C. Case
Chengming Yang
Current Developments
Enforcing Marine Environmental Law in China: Some New Measures
Keyuan Zou; Jiayi Wang
Book Reviews
Roger O’Keefe and Christian J. Tams, The United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property: A Commentary
Sienho Yee
Ferdinand J.M. Feldbrugge, A History of Russian Law: From Ancient Times to the Council Code (Ulozhenie) of Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich of 1649
Sergey Yu Marochkin; Oleg Yu Vinnichenko; Svetlana S Racheva, Ph.D, LLM