Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: March 2023

Case Western Reserve University School of Law
ISSN 0008-7254


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 422

September 22, 2012

  • The War Powers Resolution - a dim and fading legacy.

  • Inadvertent implications of the War Powers Resolution.

  • The United States' use of drones in the War on Terror: the (il)legality of targeted killings under international law.

  • America's drone wars.

  • Targeted killing: when proportionality gets all out of proportion.

  • Rightly dividing the domestic jihadist from the enemy combatant in the 'war against al-Qaeda': why it matters in rendition and targeted killing.

  • Climate change, presidential power, and leadership: 'we can't wait'.

  • Climate change, presidential power, and leadership: 'we can't wait'.

  • The president and international financial regulation.

  • Comparing the approaches of the presidential candidates.

  • Thoughts on Medellin v. Texas.

  • A tragi-comedy of errors erodes self-execution of treaties: Medellin v. Texas and beyond.

  • The politicization of judgment enforcement.

  • War powers, foreign affairs, and the courts: some institutional considerations.

  • United States ratification of the Law of the Sea Convention: securing our navigational future while managing China's blue water ambitions.

  • Preventing mass atrocity crimes: the responsibility to protect and the Syria crisis.

  • Reflections from the International Criminal Court prosecutor.

  • Cyberwar and unmanned aerial vehicles: using new technologies, from espionage to action.

  • Lending an 'invisible hand' to the navy: armed guards as a free market assistance to defeating piracy.

  • Somebody else's problem: how the United States and Canada violate international law and fail to ensure the prosecution of war criminals.

  • March 22, 2013

  • Using civil remedies in corruption and asset recovery cases.

  • The reach and the grasp of international criminal justice - how do we lengthen the arm of the law?

  • The birth and persistence of the Katyn lie.

  • Current status of the "Katyn case" in Russia.

  • The crime of genocide committed against the Poles by the USSR before and during World War II: an international legal study.

  • The crime of genocide committed against the Poles by the USSR before and during World War II: an international legal study.

  • September 22, 2013

  • Perspectives on the growing trend of child piracy.

  • The pre-history of piracy as a crime & its definitional odyssey.

  • Moving from crisis management to a sustainable solution for Somali piracy: selected initiatives and the role of international law.

  • Global conventions on maritime crimes involving piratical acts.

  • Assessing current trends and efforts to combat piracy: a case study on Kenya.

  • Current trends in global piracy: can Somalia's successes help combat piracy in the Gulf of Guinea and elsewhere?

  • Assessing current trends and efforts to combat piracy.

  • Maritime piracy: a sustainable global solution.

  • Children and marine piracy.

  • Child pirates: rehabilitation, reintegration, and accountability.

  • Juvenile pirates: 'Lost Boys' or violent criminals?

  • Combating maritime piracy: inter-disciplinary cooperation and information sharing.

  • New thinking in the fight against marine piracy: financing and plunder, pre-empting piracy before prevention becomes necessary.

  • Somali piracy--are we at the end game?

  • Operational responses to piracy--a first principles approach.

  • International maritime piracy: an old profession that is capable of new tricks, but change is possible.

  • Rules of engagement and legal frameworks for multinational counter-piracy operations.

  • Talking foreign policy: a roundtable on piracy.

  • Why now is the time to resolve the Dokdo/Takeshima dispute.

  • March 22, 2015

  • Back to the future: reflections on the advent of autonomous weapons systems.

  • The debate over autonomous weapons systems.

  • Lethal autonomous weapons and jus ad bellum proportionality.

  • Unpunished insults - the looming cyber Barbary wars.

  • Show me on the map where they hacked you: cyberwar and the geospatial Internet doctrine.