ISSN: 0922-1565 (Print), 1478-9698 (Online)
Firmly established as one of the leading journals in the field, the Leiden Journal of International Law (LJIL) provides a venue for sharp and critical voices that speak on the theory and practice of international law. It aspires to introduce or amplify refreshing and innovative approaches to perennial as well as topical issues in the field. The Journal’s focus rests on international legal theory, international law and practice, international criminal law, as well as international courts and tribunals.
CONTENIDO
Editorial
Responses of international legal academia to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
Anna-Alexandra Marhold
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Prometheus caged: The exiling of Napoleon and the Law of Nations, 1814–1821
Adam Rowe
Inside the treaty interpreter’s mind: An experimental linguistic approach to international law
Benedikt Pirker, Izabela Skoczeń
Ableism in the college of international lawyers: On disabling differences in the professional field
Lys Kulamadayil
The social field of international adjudication: Structures and practices of a conflictive professional universe
Tommaso Soave
INTERNATIONAL LAW AND PRACTICE
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
National climate litigation and the international rule of law
Andreas Buser
The fragmentation of international investment and tax dispute settlement: A good idea?
Javier García Olmedo
At war? Party status and the war in Ukraine
Alexander Wentker
The relevance of the African regional human rights system in the urban age
Marius Pieterse
Election hacking, the rule of sovereignty, and deductive reasoning in customary international law
Steven Wheatley
Conferences of the Parties beyond international environmental law: How COPs influence the content and implementation of their parent treaties
Sebastián Rioseco
(Il)legitimacy of international intellectual property regime?
Gürkan Çapar
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS AND TRIBUNALS
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Digital evidence and fair trial rights at the International Criminal Court
María de Arcos Tejerizo
Mapping interpretation by the International Criminal Court
Stewart Manley, Pardis Moslemzadeh Tehrani, Rajah Rasiah
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bibliography
Book Review
Tom Ginsburg, Democracies and International Law, Cambridge University Press, 2021, 329pp, £29.99 (hb) doi: 10.1017/9781108914871
Christian Pippan
Andrew Clapham, War, Oxford University Press, 2021, 624pp, £29.99 (pb)
Maria Varaki