Skip to content

Cambridge International Law Journal

Edward Elgar Publishing (www.elgaronline.com/cilj)
  • Home
  • The CILJ
    • Article Submissions
    • Submission Instructions
    • Journal Archive
    • Subscriptions
  • Annual Conference
    • 14th Annual Conference of the Cambridge International Law Journal
    • Conference Archive
  • CILJ-LCIL Annual Lecture
    • Annual Lecture Archive
  • Blog
    • Blog Submissions
    • Latest Posts
  • About CILJ
    • Editors-in-Chief
    • Faculty Advisory Board
    • Editorial Board
    • Academic Review Board
  • Contact

2047: Towards Fully Automated Drones and Outsourced Responsibility in Warfare

February 9, 2012 Henri Decoeur

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV – aka ‘drones’) are increasingly used in conflict zones (and elsewhere) for a variety of tasks,…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, War

Conveying Complexity: Martti Koskenniemi on the Cambridge Companion to International Law

February 3, 2012 Bart Smit-Duijzentkunst

  Conveying Complexity: an Interview with Martti Koskenniemi   What gap does this book fill in international legal literature –…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Interviews

The Cambridge Companion to International Law: A Cover Story

January 28, 2012 James Crawford

Dialogue of Two Editors   I want you to imagine the Jesus College Common Room, Lent term 2008. The three…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Interviews

The Justiciability of International Disputes and International Law’s Functional Reading: Some Thoughts on Account of the ICJ’s Recent Judgment

January 11, 2012 Solon Solomon

I have argued that justiciability should be discerned as lato and stricto sensu. The former comprises factors external to the…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Procedure

Iran, the Nuclear Issue & Countermeasures

January 10, 2012 Sahib Singh

In particular, I wish to examine the question of standing, under the law of State responsibility (particularly under Article 42(b)(ii)…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, War

Eurozone crisis: light at the end of the tunnel?

January 3, 2012 Michael Waibel

The British government’s decision to veto an amendment of the EU treaties at a time of acute peril for the…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Economic Law

New journal; new blog; new reading: The ICC’s Arrest Warrants for Incumbent Presidents

December 12, 2011 Sarah Nouwen

In another blog, Mogogo Albanese and I set out why President Bashir could continue travelling without legal fear for arrest:…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Human Rights

From sovereign crisis to banking crisis: transmission channels and policy responses for Greece and the eurozone

December 7, 2011 Valia Babis

Why were the banks affected? 1) Exposures to Greek public sector debt Greek banks’ exposures to public sector debt are…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Economic Law

The rule of law and the ICC: is Libya ‘unable’ to try Saif al-Islam Gaddafi?

November 30, 2011 Cameron Miles

In substantive terms, the fulcrum of the matter is seen to be the requirement of ‘complementarity’ within the ICC Statute,…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Current Affairs, Human Rights Filed under: Gaddafi, ICC, Libya

International Constitutionalism at the European University Institute in Florence

November 25, 2011 Daniel Costelloe

At no point were discussants in a position to agree on the meaning of “international constitutionalism”. That, however, that was…

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Conferences, Current Affairs

Post navigation

Page 38 of 39
← Previous 1 … 37 38 39 Next →

About

The CILJ is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal with a broad focus on international and EU law. It is run by the postgraduate community of the Cambridge Faculty of Law.

Recent Blogs

  • The Scope of Protection of the Principle of Sovereign Immunity against Insolvency Challenges in the European Single Market
  • Labelling Drug Cartels as Terrorist Organisations: Can the US Invoke a Right to Self-defence?
  • Succession of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination concerning the Former Soviet Republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan

Topics

Recent Comments

  • Ertogrul Baylarbayli on The Inclusion of Ecocide: Legal Challenges and Prospects for the Rome Statute
  • Ziya Agdamski on The Inclusion of Ecocide: Legal Challenges and Prospects for the Rome Statute
  • Khalid Been Ahmad on Montauk Metals v Colombia: An Award With Entangled Reasoning?
  • Antonella Trentini on Unveiling Modern Slavery: Visual Solutions to a Hidden Crisis
  • Sadla Tarnim on Environmental Justice in Investment Arbitration: Will Renco v Peru (II) Pave the Way?

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
Copyright © 2025 Cambridge International Law Journal — Primer WordPress theme by GoDaddy