Volume 33, Issue 1
Articles:
Globalizing User Rights-Talk: On Copyright Limits and Rhetorical Risks, Carys J. Craig
Beyond a Flawed Trial: ICC Failures to Ensure International Standards of Fairness in the Trials of Former Libyan Regime Members, Mark Ellis
Criminal Prosecution of UN Peacekeepers: When Defenders of Peace Incite Further Conflict Through Their Own Misconduct, Shayna Ann Giles
The Interpretive Argument for a Balanced Three-Step Test?, Patrick R. Goold
The Perfect Match: Civil Law Judges and Open-Ended Fair Use Provisions, Martin Senftleben
Note:
The Do’s and Don’ts of Federal Constitutions: A Case Study on Yemen, Ayat Mujais
Volume 32, Issue 5
Article:
The Ideal Arbitrator: Does One Size Fit All?, James Crawford AC
Note:
“Salvaging” History: Underwater Cultural Heritage and Commercial Salvage, Ben Juvelier
Comment:
Human Rights in Times of Crisis: Article 3 Prevails – Examining How LGBTQ Asylum Seekers in the European Union are Denied Equal Protection of Law, Michael A. Witschel
Volume 32, Issue 4
Prologue:
Prologue, Robert K. Goldman & Claudio Grossman
Introduction:
Extractive Industries and Human Rights, Claudia Martin & Diego Rodríguez-Pinzón
Link to Co-Directors Introduction
Articles:
La Responsibilidad Internacional de Los Estados de Origen de Las Industrias Extractivas: Aproximación a Las Obligaciones Extraterritoriales del Derecho a La Consulta en El Marco del SIDH, Roberto Luis Bravo Figueroa
Búsqueda de Consensos Sobre Empresas y Derechos Humanos: Hacia un Instrumento Internacional Vinculante, Juan Ruiz Galán
La “Responsabilidad de Respetar” Los Derechos Humanos y El Establecimiento del Deber de Debida Diligencia Como una Obligación Legal para Las Industrias Extractivas: Defíos y Oportunidades en Las Américas, Tatiana Gos
Untying the Gordian Knot: Re-Assessing the Impact of Business and Human Rights Principles on Extractive Resource Governance in Sub-Saharan Africa, Oyeniyi Abe
Mining for Compromise in Pastoral Greenland: Promise, Progress, and Problems in International Laws’ Response to Indigenous People, Lauren Manning
The Sovereign State Responsibility and the Human Rights Imperative of Zero-Gas Emission in Niger-Delta: Re-Jigging the Imposed Legal Order for a Quick Climatic Redress, Ogunnaike Oluseyi Taiwo
Volume 32, Issue 3
Introduction:
Exploring the Intersections Between International and Domestic Justice Efforts, Susana SáCouto
Articles:
The Persuasive Authority of International Criminal Tribunals, Elena Baylis
From Law versus Politics to Law in Politics: A Pragmatist Assessment of the ICC’s Impact, Geoff Dancy and Florencia Montal
Link to Dancy and Montal Article
Promoting Domestic Accountability for Conflict-Related Sexual Violence: The Cases of Guatemala, Peru, and Colombia, Daniela Kravetz
Challenges and New Frontiers: National Courts as the Frontline of International Law, Hon. M. Margaret McKeown
Volume 32, Issue 2
Prologue:
Prologue, Claudio Grossman
Introduction:
Transitional Justice, International Human Rights, and Humanitarian Law, Claudia Martin and Diego Rodriguez-Pinzon
Link to Martin and Rodriguez-Pinzon Introduction
Articles:
Verdad y Justicia: ¿Términos Incompatibles en la Justicia Transicional?, Ianiv Garfunkel
Estándares de la Carte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos para la Reparación del Derecho a la Verdad en el Perú del Posconflicto, Jean Franco Olivera Astete
Cuatro Mitos Sobra la Justicia Retributiva como Mecanismo de Justicia Transicional, Juan Sebastián Vera Sánchez
Rape by Any Other Name: Mapping the Feminist Legal Discourse Regarding Rape in Conflict onto Transitional Justice in Cambodia, Sarah Deibler
Prosecutorial Discretion in the Investigation and Prosecution of Massive Human Rights Violations: Lessons from the Argentine Experience, Mariano Gaitán
Through the Looking-Glass: Nuremberg’s Confusing Legacy on Corporate Accountability under International Law, Jonathan Kolieb
Volume 32, Issue 1
Articles:
The New Frontiers of User Rights, Niva Elkin-Koren
The Role of Human Rights in Copyright Enforcement Online: Elaborating a Legal Framework for Website Blocking, Christopher Geiger and Elena Izyumenko
Link to Geiger and Izyumenko Article
Copyright Divisibility and the Anticommons, Jyh-An Lee
Public Policies for Education in Latin America and the Difficulties Imposed by International Obligations for Technological Protections Measures, Marcela Palacio Puerta
Safeguards for Defendant Rights and Interests in International Intellectual Property Enforcement Treaties, Kimberlee Weatherall
The Quest for a User-Friendly Copyright Regime in Hong Kong, Peter K. Yu
Comment:
The Fair and Equitable Treatment Standard: A Search for a Better Balance in International Investment Agreements, Kendra Leite
AUILR
The American University International Law Review publishes articles, critical essays, comments, and casenotes on a wide variety of international law topics, including public and private international law, the law of international organizations, international trade law, international arbitration, and international human rights. AUILR also publishes pieces on topics of foreign and comparative law that are of particular interest to the international legal community.
AUILR enjoys a special relationship with the Washington College of Law’s prestigiousInternational Legal Studies Program and renowned Academy on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. The journal draws on this relationship and publishes annually a unique bilingual collection of English and Spanish language articles on timely issues related to international law, in partnership with the Academy on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law.
AUILR also enjoys a special relationship with Oxford University Press in which it provides summarizations of opinions of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. All reports are published online through the Oxford Reports on International Law.
In addition, AUILR also collaborates with American Society of International Law (“ASIL”), which gives the journal the privilege of annually publishing the Grotius Lecture and Response from ASIL’s Annual Meeting.
AUILR is one of the most frequently cited international law reviews in the United States.
The International Law Review is a member of the National Conference of International Law Journals and is indexed in:
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