The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 32 (2021) No. 3) is now out. EJIL subscribers have full access to the latest issue of the journal at EJIL’s Oxford University Press site. Readers can access those articles that are freely available without subscription at EJIL’s own website. The free access articles in this issue are Dissenting Opinions and Rights Protection in the European Court: A Reply to Laurence Helfer and Erik Voeten by Alec Stone Sweet, Wayne Sandholtz, and Mads Andenas, and the Rejoinder by Laurence Helfer and Erik Voeten. Apart from articles published in the last 12 months, EJIL articles are freely available on the EJIL website.
Over the coming days, we will have a series of editorial posts. These posts appear in the Editorial of the new issue, along with this post by Joseph Weiler, one of the Editors-in-Chief of EJIL, which was published on the blog in September.
Here is the Table of Contents for this new issue:
Letters to the Editors
Cancelling Schmitt, Freddie Sourgens, Tara Van Ho
Editorial: Brexit, the Irish Protocol and the ‘Versailles Effect’; In This Issue
Articles
Bernard M. Hoekman and Petros C. Mavroidis, Preventing the Bad from Getting Worse: The End of the World (Trade Organization) As We Know it?
Antonio Coco and Talita de Souza Dias, ‘Cyber Due Diligence’: A Patchwork of Protective Obligations in International Law
Felix E. Torres, Reparations: What for? Developing State Positive Duties to Address Socio-Economic Harms in (Post)Conflict Settings through the European Court of Human Rights
Johannes Hendrik Fahner, In Dubio Mitius – Advancing Clarity and Modesty in Treaty Interpretation
EJIL: Debate!
Gábor Kajtár and Gergő Barna Balázs, Beyond Tehran and Nairobi – Can Attacks against Embassies Serve as Basis for the Invocation of Self-Defence?
Tom Ruys, Can Attacks against Embassies Serve as a Basis for the Invocation of Self-Defence?: A Reply to Gábor Kajtár and Gergő Balázs
EJIL: Debate!
Alec Stone Sweet, Wayne Sandholtz, and Mads Andenas, Dissenting Opinions and Rights Protection in the European Court: A Reply to Laurence Helfer and Erik Voeten
Laurence Helfer and Erik Voeten, Rejoinder
Roaming Charges: Places with a Soul
Agata Wiącek, Pining for Re-entry
Critical Review of Governance
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, ‘Soft law, Informal Lawmaking and ‘New Institutions’ in the Global Counter-Terrorism Architecture
Book Review Symposium: Martti Koskenniemi, To the Uttermost Parts of the self employed database Earth: Legal Imagination and International Power, 1300-1870
Nehal Bhuta, ‘Let us suppose that universals do not exist’: Bricoleur and Bricolage in Martti Koskenniemi’s To the Uttermost Parts of the Earth
Julia Costa Lopez, Of Sovereign Kings and Propertied Subjects – Beginnings and Alternatives
Luigi Nuzzo, The Law That Wasn’t There
Francesca Iurlaro, Disenchanting Gentili
Benjamin Straumann, Is the Law the Soul of the State?