All Stories

  1. The League of Nations and Visions of World Order
  2. The covid-19 Infodemic and Online Platforms as Intermediary Fiduciaries under International Law
  3. The Crisis in Crimea and the Principle of Non-Intervention
  4. The Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare: A Commentary on Chapter II—The Use of Force
  5. Collective Security
  6. Regional organisations
  7. State-building
  8. Sanctions
  9. Military security
  10. Conclusion
  11. Bibliography
  12. Collective Security: a historical journey
  13. Accountability in Collective Security
  14. States and Collective Security
  15. The morphology of collective security
  16. Private military and security companies
  17. Triggers, actors and institutions
  18. The United Nations
  19. The management of normative conflicts
  20. International responsibility and liability
  21. Individual criminal responsibility
  22. The settlement of disputes and preventive security
  23. Law as internal facilitator, regulator or constraint
  24. Law as external facilitator, regulator or constraint
  25. Cyber attacks, self-defence and the problem of attribution
  26. Cyber War and International Law
  27. Nicolas Politis' Initiatives to Outlaw War and Define Aggression, and the Narrative of Progress in International Law
  28. The Application of Public International Law to the Crisis in Libya
  29. Noam Lubell, Extraterritorial Use of Force against Non-State Actors, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2010, xxi + 288pp., ISBN 978-0-19-958484-0, £70.00.
  30. Security Council Legislation, Article 2(7) of the UN Charter, and the Principle of Subsidiarity
  31. Chapter 9 The Responsibility of International Organisations for Military Missions
  32. Necessity and the Use of Force: A Special Regime
  33. Cosmopolitan legitimacy and UN collective security
  34. 43. Command Responsibility And The Principle Of Individual Criminal Responsibility: A Critical Analysis Of International Jurisprudence
  35. Transnational Constitutionalism
  36. Introduction – Constitutionalism: a theoretical roadmap
  37. The constitutional role of general principles of law in international and European jurisprudence
  38. EU Peacekeeping Operations: Legal and Theoretical Issues
  39. Consent, Neutrality/Impartiality and the Use of Force in Peacekeeping: Their Constitutional Dimension
  40. Anne Orford, Reading Humanitarian Intervention: Human Rights and the Use of Force in International Law, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 052180464, 243 pp
  41. DECISIONS OF INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS: INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE: I. APPLICATION FOR REVISION OF THE JUDGMENT OF 11 JULY 1996 IN THE CASE CONCERNING APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE (BOSNIA AND...
  42. The Will of the International Community as a Normative Source of International Law
  43. The Shifting Laws on the Use of Force and the Trivialization of the UN Collective Security System: The Need to Reconstitute It
  44. The shifting laws on the use of force and the trivialization of the UN collective security system: the need to reconstitute it
  45. Nikolaos K. Tsagourias, Jurisprudence of International Law. The Humanitarian Dimension, Melland Schill Studies in International Law, Manchester, Manchester University Press, New York, Juris, 2000, 137 pp. ISBN: 0719054656, £45.00.
  46. Humanitarian Intervention After Kosovo and Legal Discourse: Self-Deception or Self-Consciousness?
  47. THE NICARAGUA CASE AND THE USE OF FORCE: THE THEORETICAL CONSTRUCTION OF THE DECISION AND ITS DECONSTRUCTION
  48. Intervention
  49. Preface
  50. The prohibition of threats of force