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Volume 35, Issue 4

The American University International Law Review.

American University International Law Review

Volume 35, Issue 4

  • Marriage Equality Under the ICCPR: How the Human Rights Committee Got It Wrong and Why It’s Time to Get It Right, Kristie A. Bluett
  • Eighteen Years of Detention at Guantánamo Bay: Compliance with International Law or the Specter of Tyranny?, Dru Brenner-Beck
  • Has President Trump Committed a War Crime by Pardoning War Criminals?, Stuart Ford
  • The Lesson Learned from the Taricco Saga: Judicial Nationalism and the Constitutional Review of E.U. Law, Gino Scaccia
  • Revisiting the Pledge by the U.K. Regarding the “Five Techniques”, William T. Worster
  • Water Law Be Dammed?: How Dam Construction by Non-hegemonic Basin States Places Strain on the Customary Law of Transboundary Watercourses, David Goad
  • Burning Down the House: Do Brazil’s Forest Management Policies Violate the No-harm Rule under the CBD and Customary International Law?, Ruslan Klafehn
  • The Cost of Ensuring Privacy: How the General Data Protection Regulation Acts as a Barrier to Trade in Violation of Articles XVI and XVII of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, Elisabeth Meddin

 

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