BaetensFreya(ed.). Identity and Diversity on the International Bench: Who Is the Judge?Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xxi–565. £117.50. ISBN: 9780198870753.
Identity and Diversity on the International Bench: Who Is the Judge? [...]
BaetensFreya(ed.). Identity and Diversity on the International Bench: Who Is the Judge?Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xxi–565. £117.50. ISBN: 9780198870753.
Identity and Diversity on the International Bench: Who Is the Judge? [...]
Karen Knop’s ForewordThis issue opens with a Foreword by the late Karen Knop. In 2020, the EJIL Editors-in-Chief invited Professor Knop to write an EJIL Foreword. EJIL Forewords,
published once a year, are commissioned lead articles that are designed to give a distinguished author the space to explore the ‘state of the field’ in a specific [...]
Rankin.MelindaDe Facto International Prosecutors in a Global Era: With My Own Eyes.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. Pp. 225. US$110. ISBN: 9781108498166. International
Prosecutors in a Global Era: With My Own Eyes [...]
AbstractThere is a debate in World Trade Organization (WTO) law about whether the right to regulate for public interest purposes is conditioned on a requirement to do so consistently.
While the early Appellate Body (AB) jurisprudence eschewed consistency testing under the formal legal test, it refrained from explicitly rejecting the practice. [...]
AbstractIn State Responsibility and Rebels, Kathryn Greenman explores the post-colonial history of state responsibility, the doctrine of international law that determines whether
a state has breached its obligations and what, if anything, can be done about it. [...]
Margulis.Matias E.Shadow Negotiators: How UN Organizations Shape the Rules of World Trade for Food Security.Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2023. Pp. 292. CAD 80,
Hardcover ISBN: 9781503633520. [...]
Srivastava.SwatiHybrid Sovereignty in World Politics.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. Pp. 279. US$99.99. ISBN: 978-1-00-920450-7. Hybrid Sovereignty in World Politics
AbstractThis article offers a critical feminist reading of the home birth jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights. The aim is to shed light on the gender sensitivity
of the Court in its legal reasoning and knowledge production. Since its first decision on the permissibility of a blanket de facto home birth ban in the case of Ternovszky [...]
Despite dropping crime rates and prison muster, pretrial population rates in New Zealand are growing faster than in other OECD nations, risking negative impacts on defendants
and communities. Fourteen defendants and 18 stakeholders were interviewed about a bail support service's strengths and weaknesses. [...]
The transnational movement of climate activists is resorting increasingly often to acts of civil disobedience. Upon being prosecuted for those acts, climate activists across
various jurisdictions are starting to plead the general criminal law defence of necessity. [...]