Print ISSN: 1572-3739
The International Organizations Law Review is a peer-reviewed journal that only publishes articles that have passed through an anonymous review process.
After the Second World War, the law of international organizations developed as a separate, but not separable, discipline within the sphere of public international law. The International Organizations Law Review functions as a discussion forum for both academics and practitioners active in this discpline. The Review offers two foci: one based in the world of scholarship and the other in the world of practice. Academic scholarship offered in the Review will focus on general and theoretical developments in international institutional law, while practitioner views offer a forum to identify and discuss legal developments within existing international organizations.
CONTENIDO
New Approaches to the Accountability of International Organizations
By: Kristen E Boon and Frédéric Mégret
Reputation and Accountability
Another Look at the United Nations’ Response to the Cholera Epidemic in Haiti
By: Kristina Daugirdas
Reparations for Mass Torts Involving the United Nations
Misguided Exceptionalism in Peacekeeping Operations
By: Carla Ferstman
Beyond UN Accountability for Human Rights Violations
Host State Inertia and the Neglected Potential of Sovereign Protection
By: Frédéric Mégret
Domestic Jurisdiction over International Financial Institutions for Injuries to Project-Affected Individuals
The Case of Jam v International Finance Corporation
By: Clemens Treichl and August Reinisch
Rethinking the Accountability—Immunity Axis through Remedies
Lessons from National Militaries
By: Kristen E Boon
International Organizations and the EU General Data Protection Regulation
Exploring the Interaction between EU Law and International Law
By: Christopher Kuner
Speculating on the World Bank’s Involvement in Post-Conflict Reconstruction Operations and Activities
By: Francesco Seatzu