Online ISSN: 2050-6333
The London Review of International Law is an online only, peer-reviewed journal for critical, innovative and cutting-edge scholarship on international law. The journal’s essential mission is to publish high-quality research. At the same time, it is a specific aim of the London Review to support and foster the emergent body of work being undertaken in the areas of international legal theory, international legal history and international socio-legal studies. This work is reshaping the contours of international legal scholarship with profound implications for received enquiries and ideas, and the London Review gives it pride of place.
The London Review encourages transdisciplinary enquiry. Disciplinary boundaries are there to be transgressed, or at any rate problematised, and the editors are keen to publish research that expands the range of concepts, insights and manoeuvres deployed to analyse international law. Equally, however, the editors aspire to publish work that explores and excavates the untold stories and lost traditions of international law itself. The disciplinary affiliation of authors is not important.
Insisting on the notion that international legal scholarship can and should read well, the London Review prioritises excellence in writing. While the careful crafting of texts is all too often subordinated to the dictates of technical proficiency, the ascent of English as a global language has generated an array of registers and modes of expression. The London Review welcomes that diversity, and encourages an experimental attitude to the communication and development of international legal ideas.
The London Review is divided into three sections. The first section publishes scholarly articles. The second section is devoted to review essays. These may be critical explorations of one or more new publications or of older texts reconsidered in the light of new publications, but may also be structured, for example, around particular scholars, concepts or events. The London Review does not publish short-length book reviews. The third section supplements this writing with material designed to broaden and enrich the international legal conversation in a different way. Varying from issue to issue, this may include annotated reprints of classic texts, translations of foreign language scholarship, and reports of archival sources, along with photography, poetry and other non-traditional forms of engagement with international legal themes.
Articles
Bad for business: the construction of modern slavery and the reconfiguration of sovereignty
Judy Fudge
Rituals of (dis)possession: appropriation and performativity in the early modern law of nations
Alexis Alvarez-Nakagawa
History and self-reflection in the teaching of international law
Henry Jones, Aoife O’Donoghue
Review Essay: Implicated in violence: Socio-legal approaches to international humanitarian law and international criminal law
Christiane Wilke
Books etc.
Symposium: The Slave Trade, Abolition and the Long History of International Criminal Law: the recaptive and the victim by Emily Haslam
Critical legal thoughts
Marie-Bénédicte Dembour
International criminal law and the slave trade: the past and the present
Michael Lobban
The precarious agency of racialised recaptives
Christine Schwöbel-Patel
Writing the recaptive: a response
Emily Haslam
Esta entrada fue modificada por última vez en 09/08/2022 15:24
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