International Organizations Law Review
Volume 16 (2019): Issue 2 (Dec 2019): Special Issue: Forum on the World Health Organization edited by Gian Luca Burci
Print ISSN: 1572-3739, Online ISSN: 1572-3747
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
The World Health Organization at 70: Challenges and Adaptation
Introductory Notes
By: Gian Luca Burci
The International Health Regulations (2005)
Strengthening Their Effective Implementation and Utilisation
By: Adam Kamradt-Scott
The Normative Gap in International Organizations Law
The Case of the World Health Organization
By: Jan Klabbers
Financing the World Health Organization
What Lessons for Multilateralism?
By: Kristina Daugirdas and Gian Luca Burci
Competence-Based Approach, Normative Control, and the International Responsibility of the EU and Its Member States
What Does Recent Practice Add to the Debate?
By: Cristina Contartese
Diplomatic Privileges and Immunities for IGO-Like Entities
A Step Towards a New Diplomatic Law?
By: Davorin Lapaš
The Denial of Oral Hearings by International Administrative Tribunals as a Factor for Lifting Organizational Immunity before European Courts
A(nother) Critical View
By: Clemens Treichl