European Journal of International Law
Volume 32, Issue 1, February 2021 – Symposium Issue: International Law and Democracy Revisited
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: On My Way In II: Countering Gender Stereotypes in Letters of Reference and Shifting Academic Valorization While We Are at It; Changes in the Masthead; In This Issue; In this Issue – Reviews
EJIL Symposium Issue: International Law and Democracy Revisited
International Law and Democracy Revisited: Introduction to the Symposium
Jan Klabbers, Doreen Lustig, André Nollkaemper, Sarah Nouwen, Michal Saliternik …
EJIL: Debate!
‘From the Wells of Disappointment’: The Curious Case of the International Law of Democracy and the Politics of International Legal Scholarship
Akbar Rasulov
The Trajectory of the Democratic Entitlement Thesis in International Legal Scholarship: A Reply to Akbar Rasulov
Brad R Roth
Articles
Can Supranational Law Enhance Democracy? EU Economic Law as a Market-Democratizing Project
Giacomo Tagiuri
The Ship of Democracy
Deborah Whitehall
New Responses to the Legitimacy Crisis of International Institutions: The Role of ‘Civil Society’ and the Rise of the Principle of Participation of ‘The Most Affected’ in International Institutional Law
Jochen von Bernstorff
Democratic Disruption in the Age of Social Media: Between Marketized and Structural Conceptions of Human Rights Law
Barrie Sander
Roaming Charges: Barrista, San Juan
Critical Review of Governance
The African Union’s Struggle Against ‘Unconstitutional Change of Government’: From a Moral Prescription to a Requirement under International Law?
Erika de Wet
Between Participation and Capture in International Rule-Making: The WHO Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors
Ayelet Berman
Critical Review of Jurisprudence
Pragmatic Adjudication of Election Cases in the European Court of Human Rights
Dmitry Kurnosov
Shaping Legislative Processes from Strasbourg
Matthew Saul
Review Essays
Attack by Design: Australia’s Offshore Detention System and the Literature of Atrocity
Itamar Mann
Near, Far, Wherever You Are: Distance and Proximity in International Criminal Law
Richard Clements
Book Reviews
Kirsten Sellars, Review of Francine Hirsch, Soviet Judgment at Nuremberg: A New History of the International Military Tribunal after World War II
Kirsten Sellars
Robert McCorquodale, Review of Martina Buscemi, Nicole Lazzerini, Laura Magi and Deborah Russo (eds), Legal Sources in Business and Human Rights: Evolving Dynamics in International and European Law
Robert McCorquodale
Gail Lythgoe, Review of Alex Jeffrey, The Edge of Law: Legal Geographies of a War Crimes Court
Gail Lythgoe
Umut Özsu, Review of Christopher R. W. Dietrich, Oil Revolution: Anticolonial Elites, Sovereign Rights, and the Economic Culture of Decolonization
Umut Özsu
Helmut Philipp Aust, Review of Malgosia Fitzmaurice and Panos Merkouris, Treaties in Motion: The Evolution of Treaties from Formation to Termination
Helmut Philipp Aust
Fernando Dias Simões, Review of Katia Fach Gómez, Key Duties of International Investment Arbitrators: A Transnational Study of Legal and Ethical Dilemmas
Fernando Dias Simões
The Last Page
29 and 30 November 2020