Friday, March 28, 2014

New Issue: Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law

The latest issue of the Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law (Vol. 2, no. 4, 2013) is out. Contents include:
  • Conference Issue: Legal Tradition in a Diverse World
    • Jasmine Moussa & Bart Smit Duijzentkunst, Editors' Introduction
    • Abdulqawi Yusuf, Diversity of Legal Traditions and International Law: Keynote Address
    • H Patrick Glenn, The State as Legal Tradition
    • James Crawford, Alain Pellet & Catherine Redgwell, Anglo-American and Continental Traditions in Advocacy before International Courts and Tribunals
    • Yaël Ronen, Blind in Their Own Cause: the Military Courts in the West Bank
    • Stephen Strickey, ‘Anglo-American' Military Justice Systems and the Wave of Civilianization: Will Discipline Survive?
    • Jonathan Hafetz, Diminishing the Value of War Crimes Prosecutions: a View of the Guantanamo Military Commissions from the Perspective of International Criminal Law
    • Valerie Oosterveld, The Influence of Domestic Legal Traditions on the Gender Jurisprudence of International Criminal Tribunals
    • Ulf Linderfalk, Towards a More Constructive Analysis of the Identity of Special Regimes in International Law: the Case of Proportionality
    • Francesco Messineo, Is There an Italian Conception of International Law?
    • Geoffrey Gordon, The Innate Cosmopolitan Tradition of International Law
    • Rosa Freedman, ‘Third Generation' Rights: Is There Room for Hybrid Constructs within International Human Rights Law?
    • Neil Dowers, The Anti-Suit Injunction and the EU: Legal Tradition and Europeanisation in International Private Law
    • Freya Baetens & Cheah Wui Ling, Being an International Law Lecturer in the 21st Century: Where Tradition Meets Innovation
    • Elihu Lauterpacht, Concluding Remarks