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International Law Reporter signals a new issue of the Leiden Journal of International Law, containing numerous contributions relevant to the readership of this interest group.
Contents:
- Editorial
- Cecily Rose, International Lawyers as Public Intellectuals and the Need for More Books
- John Dugard Lecture - 2015
- Kenneth J. Keith, The International Rule of Law
- International Legal Theory
- Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral, The Shifting Origins of International Law
- Yolanda Gamarra, Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406): A Precursor of Intercivilizational Discourse
- International Law and Its Methodology
- Ino Augsberg, Some Realism About New Legal Realism: What's New, What's Legal, What's Real?
- Jan Klabbers, Whatever Happened to Gramsci? Some Reflections on New Legal Realism
- Gregory Shaffer, New Legal Realism's Rejoinder
- Jakob V.H. Holtermann & Mikael Rask Madsen, High Stakes and Persistent Challenges – A Rejoinder to Klabbers and Augsberg
- International Law and Practice
- Hugh Thirlway, Human Rights in Customary Law: An Attempt to Define Some of the Issues
- Rosa Freedman & Nicolas Lemay-Hebert, ‘Jistis ak Reparasyon pou Tout Viktim Kolera MINUSTAH’: The United Nations and the Right to Health in Haiti
- Mamadou Hébié, Was There Something Missing in the Decolonization Process in Africa?: The Territorial Dimension
- Friedrich Benjamin Schnedier, The International Convention on the Prevention of Odious Agreements: A Human Rights-Based Mechanism to Avoid Odious Debts
- Shen Wei, Expropriation in Transition: Evolving Chinese Investment Treaty Practices in Local and Global Contexts
- Hague International Tribunals: International Court of Justice
- Abdulqawi A. Yusuf, From Reluctance to Acquiescence: The Evolving Attitude of African States Towards Judicial and Arbitral Settlement of Disputes
- International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
- Marcus Joyce, Duress: From Nuremberg to the International Criminal Court, Finding the Balance Between Justification and Excuse
- Aldo Zammit Borda, Appraisal-Based and Flexible Approaches to External Precedent in International Criminal Law