New Issue of EJIL (Vol. 25: No. 2) Out This Week

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The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law will be published this Friday. Over the course of the week, we will have a series of posts by Joseph Weiler – Editor in Chief of EJIL. These posts will then appear in the Editorial in the upcoming issue. Here is the Table of Contents:

Editorial 

Fateful Elections? Investing in the Future of Europe; Masthead Changes; In this Issue

EJIL: Keynote 

Anne Orford, Scientific Reason and the Discipline of International Law

Articles

Sergio Puig, Social Capital in the Arbitration Market

Oliver Diggelmann and Tilmann Altwicker, How is Progress Constructed in International Legal Scholarship?

Grégoire Mallard, Crafting the Nuclear Regime Complex (1950-1975): Dynamics of Harmonization of Opaque Treaty Rules

 New Voices: A Selection from the Second Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law

Moria Paz, The Tower of Babel: Human Rights and the Paradox of Language

Arnulf Becker Lorca, Petitioning the International: A ‘Pre-history’ of Self-Determination

Roaming Charges: Places of Social and Financial Crisis: Dublin 2014

 EJIL: Debate!

László Blutman, Conceptual Confusion and Methodological Deficiencies: Some Ways That Theories on Customary International Law Fail

Andrew Guzman and Jerome Hsiang, Conceptual Confusion and Methodological Deficiencies: A Reply to László Blutman

 Critical Review of International Jurisprudence

Loveday Hodson, Women’s Rights and the Periphery: CEDAW’s Optional Protocol

 Critical Review of International Governance

Wolfgang Hoffmann-Riem, The Venice Commission of the European Council – Standards and Impact

Book Reviews

Mark Mazower. Governing the World. The History of an Idea (Jochen von Bernstorff)

Monica García-Salmones Rovira. The Project of Positivism in International Law (David Roth-Isigkeit)

Carlo Focarelli, International Law as Social Construct. The Struggle for Global Justice (Lorenzo Gradoni)

Philipp Dann. The Law of Development Cooperation: A Comparative Analysis of the World Bank, the EU and Germany(Giedre Jokubauskaite)

E. Papastavridis. The Interception of Vessels on the High Seas, Contemporary Challenges to the Legal Order of the Oceans (Seline Trevisanut)

Kjetil Mujezinović Larsen, Camilla Guldahl Cooper and Gro Nystuen (eds).  Searching for a ‘Principle of Humanity’ in International Humanitarian Law (Catriona H. Cairns)

Morten Bergsmo, LING Yan (eds). State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law (Alexandre Skander Galand)

 Briefly Noted

Kevin Jon Heller and Gerry Simpson (eds). The Hidden Histories of War Crimes Trials (Milan Kuhli)

 The Last Page

Kim Lockwood, The Waiting Room

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