Volume 25
2003-2004
Issue 1
- The Charter of the United Nations: A Commentary of Bruno Simma's Commentary
- Envisioning a Global Legal Culture
- Labor Standards and the Generalized System of Preferences: The European Labor Incentives
- Protection Against Unwarranted Searches and Seizures of Corporate Premises Under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights: The Colas Est SA v. France Approach
- Compliance with ICJ Provisional Measure and the Meaning of Review and Reconsideration Under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations: Avena and Other Mexican Nationals (Mex. V. U.S.)
- The Responsibility to Protect: A Beaver Without a Dam?
- Prosecuting Human Rights Violations in Europe and America: How Legal System Structure Affects Compliance with International Obligations
Issue 2
- Lessons from the Protracted Mox Plant Dispute: A Proposed Protocal on Marine Environmental Impact Assessment to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
- Of Federalism, Human Rights, and the Holland Caveat: Congressional Power to Iplement Treaties
- Re-Examining the Role of Private Property in Market Democracies:Problematic Ideological Issues Raised by Land Registration
- The Battle to Establish an Adversarial Trial System in Italy
Issue 3
- WTO and GMOs: Analyzing the European Community's Recent Regulations Covering the Labeling of Genetically Modified Organisms
- Sexual Slavery and the International Criminal Court: Advancing International Law
- Continuing Crimes in the Rome Statute
- The War Against Iraq and the Future of International Law: Hegemony or Pluralism?
- Beyond Rights: Legal Process and Ethnic Conflicts
- Traditional Hindu Law in the Guise of 'Postmodernism:' A Review Article
- Refugee Protection In International Law: UNHCR's Global Consultations on International Protection
- The New Codex Alimentarius Commission Standards for Food Created with Modern Biotechnology: Implications for the EC GMO Framework's Compliance with the SPS Agreement
Issue 4
- The State and Globalization: Denationalized Participation
- Regime-Collisions: The Vain Search for Legal Unity in the Fragmentation of Global Law
- Reply to Andreas L. Paulus Consensus as Fiction of Global Law
- Commentary to Professor Hafner
- Commentary to Professor Guibernau
- Diversity or Cacophony? The Continuing Debate Over New Sources of International Law
- Sub-State Nationalism and International Law
- National Self-Determination and Ethnic Minorities
- A Commentary to Montserrat Guibernau Nations Without States: Political Communities in the Global Age
- Reply to Annika Tahvanainen
- Nations Without States: Political Communities in the Global Age
- The Reality of Private Rights, Duties, and Participation in the International Legal Process
- Beyond State Sovereignty: The Protection of Cultural Heritage as a Shared Interest of Humanity
- Arbitral Law-Making
- Fragmentation of International Law and Establishing an Accountability Regime for International Organizations: The Role of the Judiciary in Closing the Gap
- Religious Freedom and the Undoing of the Westphalian State
- The Essentially Contested Nature of the Concept of Sovereignty: Implications for the Exercise by International Organizations of Delegated Powers of Government
- Commentary to Professor Stephen D. Krasner
- The Hole in the Whole: Sovereignty, Shared Sovereignty, and International Law
- Commentary to Andreas Fischer- Lescano & Gunther Teubner. The Legitimacy of International Law and the Role of the State
- Multiple International Judicial Forums: A Reflection of the Growing Strength of International Law or its Fragmentation?
- International Legal Pluralism
- Reply to Joshua Meltzer
- Interpreting the WTO Agreements- A Commentary on Professor Pauwelyn's Approach
- Bridging Fragmentation and Unity: International Law as a Universe of Inter-Connected Islands
- Judicial Dialogue for Legal Multiculturalism
- The Varied Policies of International Juridical Bodies- Reflections on Theory and Practice
- Pros and Cons Ensuing from Fragmentation of International Law
- Fragmentation in a Positive Light
- The United Nations Security Council's Quest for Effectiveness