ISSN: 0938-5428, EISSN: 1464-3596
The European Journal of International Law is firmly established as one of the world’s leading journals in its field. With its distinctive combination of theoretical and practical approaches to the issues of international law, the journal offers readers a unique opportunity to stay in touch with the latest developments in this rapidly evolving area.
Each issue of the EJIL provides a forum for the exploration of the conceptual and theoretical dimensions of international law as well as for up-to-date analysis of topical issues.
Additionally, it is the only journal to provide systematic coverage of the relationship between international law and the law of the European Union and its Member States.
CONTENIDO
Editorial
Editorial: Gender in Academic Publishing; The Legality of the Israeli Annexation – Redux; In This Issue
Articles
What Is Wrong with Investment Arbitration? Evidence from a Set of Behavioural Experiments
Maria Laura Marceddu, Pietro Ortolani
Unreliable Protection: An Experimental Study of Experts’ In Bello Proportionality Decisions
Daniel Statman, Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Micha Mandel, Michael Skerker, Steven De Wijze
The Case of Female Perpetrators of International Crimes: Exploratory Insights and New Research Directions
Jasenka Ferizović
Symposium: Theorizing International Organizations Law
On Theorizing International Organizations Law: Editors’ Introduction
Jan Klabbers, Guy Fiti Sinclair
Autorité oblige: The Rise and Fall of Hans Kelsen’s Legal Concept of International Institutions
Jochen von Bernstorff
C. Wilfred Jenks and the Futures of International Organizations Law
Guy Fiti Sinclair
Functionalism According to Paul Reuter: Playing a Lone Hand
Evelyne Lagrange
Schermers’ Dilemma
Jan Klabbers
Louis Sohn’s Legacy
Ian Johnstone
Organizing Internationally: Georges Abi-Saab, the Congo Crisis and the Decolonization of the United Nations
Umut Özsu
Roaming Charges: Still Life Portrait
Focus: Human Rights and Science
The Human Right to Science and Its Relationship to International Environmental Law
Anna-Maria Hubert
The ‘Rights’ Way to Democratize the Science–Policy Interface in International Environmental Law? A Reply to Anna-Maria Hubert
Jacqueline Peel
The Right to Benefit from Science and Its Implications for Genomic Data Sharing
Rumiana Yotova, Bartha M Knoppers
EJIL: Debates!
Challenges and Pitfalls in Research on Compliance with the ‘Views’ of UN Human Rights Treaty Bodies: A Reply to Vera Shikhelman
Andreas J Ullmann, Andreas von Staden
Is IHL a Sham? A Reply to Eyal Benvenisti and Doreen Lustig
Jochen von Bernstorff
Beyond the ‘Sham’ Critique and the Narrative of Humanitarianism: A Rejoinder to Jochen von Bernstorff
Eyal Benvenisti, Doreen Lustig
Changing the Guards – Part II
The Juncker Presidency – A Study in Character
Daniel Sarmiento
Review Essay
The Days of Wine and Roses
Jan Klabbers
The Allocation of International Responsibility between International Organizations and Their Member States: A Case of Indirect Responsibility?
Christiane Ahlborn
Book Reviews
The Analogy between States and International Organizations
Samantha Besson
Droit des organisations internationales
Frédéric Dopagne
The Law of the International Civil Service
Lorenzo Gasbarri