Jacob Katz Cogan
@jkatzcogan.bsky.social
1.5K followers 240 following 1.2K posts
Professor of Law, University of Cincinnati; Co-EIC, International Organizations Law Review; Deputy Editor, Human Rights Quarterly; ILR Blog
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jkatzcogan.bsky.social
New Issue: Journal of International Dispute Settlement
The latest issue of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement (Vol. 16, no. 3, September 2025) is out. Contents include: * Special Issue: Current Challenges in International Investment Law * Esmé Shirlow, Transparency in investment treaty arbitration: past, present, and future * Special issue: Justice Post-ISDS * Francesca Farrington & Nevena Jevremović, Between a rock and a hard place: the impact of replacing or abolishing ISDS on investment-affected parties * Special Issue: Translucent Justice * Walter Arévalo-Ramírez & Andrés Rousset-Siri, Undermining the authority of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: cases of state’s weaponization of the value of transparency * Suhong Yang & Shuai Guo, Selection process of judges and members at international courts and tribunals: in search of efficient transparency * Gautam Mohanty & Alexandros Bakos, Revisiting transparency standards in investor–state dispute settlement vis-à-vis third-party funding: how much transparency is too much transparency? * Elena Abrusci, More transparency on regional human rights courts? What we (still) need to know to understand and access regional human rights justice * Marco Dimetto, Inscrutable procedural orders: two models of transparency in international dispute settlement (ICSID and ICJ) * Thomas Vogt-Geisse, Three visions of transparency in international adjudication * Letizia Lo Giacco, Rethinking transparency through the public–private prism: the case of the ICC–NGOs partnership * Ezgi Özlü, Translucent justice: strategic transparency and the legitimacy of the ECtHR * Hemi Mistry, Transparency as performance: the ‘As Is’ and ‘As If’ worlds of international adjudication * Fenghua Li, Transparency as a pathway to align ICSID arbitration with sustainable development * Irene Miano, De facto transparency? Investigating the practice of the International Court of Justice * Danae Georgoula & Lan Ngoc Nguyen, Judicial reasoning as a mask: rationalizing the transparency of the law of the sea tribunals * Carolina Mancuso, Procedural rules and judicial practices: a good or bad match for transparency? * Bruno Biazatti, The backlog-driven reform of the Initial Review of petitions in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights * Editorial * Cédric Dupont & Thomas Schultz, Trump’s tariffs: from a trade problem into an investment problem? * Articles * Georgios Dimitropoulos, Investment law and the digital economy * George Kahale, The Mobil and Conoco cases against Venezuela: the good, the bad and the ugly * Yun Zhao & Yanru Chen, The evolving lex mercatoria: a game-changer for transparency in international commercial arbitration * Jay Tseng, Insolvency of a party in international arbitration: considerations on staying arbitration proceedings * Eleonora Castro, Clarifying the clean hands doctrine under general international law * Nektarios Papadimos, A golden mean approach to independence and impartiality in investment arbitration * Zelin Li, Inter-court competition in non-adjudicative activities: a case study of the International Court of Justice presidential speeches, 1991–2022 * Daria Levina, The myth of instant success: a historical account of the Commercial Court of England and Wales * Current Developments * Gabrielle Marceau & Maria George, Trade, climate and differentiation: an analysis of the interaction between the ‘Principle of Common But Differentiated Responsibilities’ and the WTO agreement * Nikiforos Panagis, Held in suspense: the past, present, and future of the suspension of proceedings at the International Court of Justice * Guang Ma & Hong Wu, The proliferation of unilateral trade measures and the crisis of the multilateral trading system      
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Reposted by Jacob Katz Cogan
mitrasharafi.bsky.social
For legal historians: did you publish a book recently that won't be represented at the Detroit ASLH conference book sale in Nov.2025? You should bring a copy for this new initiative to showcase your work! Much needed as only a few publishers are represented at the book sale: aslh.net/new-works-in...
New Works in Legal History: Displays at the Detroit Meeting | American Society for Legal History
New Works in Legal History: Many legal historians publish books with presses that are not represented at the conference book sale. In recognition of this fact, the ASLH will host a table to showcase t...
aslh.net
jkatzcogan.bsky.social
New Issue: International Journal of Transitional Justice
The latest issue of the International Journal of Transitional Justice (Vol. 19, no. 2, July 2025) is out. Contents include: * Editorial * Vasuki Nesiah, After Gaza * Articles * Safia K Southey, Building Reparations: Key Factors for Success in Transitional Justice Efforts * Janine Natalya Clark, Whose Testimony? Thinking about Other-Than-Human Witnesses in Transitional Justice * Jeremy Julian Sarkin, Why the International Criminal Court Should Apply Restorative Justice and Transitional Justice Principles to Improve the Impact of Its Criminal Trials on Societies around the World * Azadeh Sobout, Urbicide and Coming to Terms with the Past: Everyday Acts of Return and Reconstruction in Post-war Nahr el Bared * Sarah A Son, Nazanin Zadeh-Cummings, & Danielle Chubb, Participatory Transitional Justice as Anticipatory Project: North Korea, Diasporas and Uncertain Futures * S Garnett Russell, Paula Mantilla-Blanco, Daniela Romero-Amaya, & Tatiana Cordero-Romero, Education and Transitional Justice: Como, Para, Sobre * Carlos Gutiérrez-Rodríguez, Memorial Justice? Lessons from Colombia on How Memorialization Can Serve Justice in Transitional Contexts * Claire-Anne Louise Lester, The Marikana Commission of Inquiry: An Ambiguous Experiment with ‘Truth’ and ‘Justice’ * Notes from the Field * Tutku Ayhan, From Sexual Violence to Systemic Vulnerabilities: Ethical Considerations in Research in Post-Atrocity Settings * Review Essay * Emma Murphy, The Good, the Bad, and the Ideal: Towards an Embrace of Complexity in ‘Victim-Centred’ Transitional Justice      
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jkatzcogan.bsky.social
Heffes: Los grupos armados frente al derecho internacional
Ezequiel Heffes has published Los grupos armados frente al derecho internacional (Tirant Lo Blanch 2025). Here's the abstract: La guerra, tal como fue conocida hasta la primera mitad del siglo XX, ha dejado de existir. La idea de un enfrentamiento exclusivamente entre los ejércitos de dos o más Estados, y llevado a cabo solo luego de presentada una declaración formal, parece una imagen cinematográfica o propia de los libros de historia. Hoy en día, la escena central es ocupada por actores diferentes a los Estados: los grupos armados. En 2024, el Comité Internacional de la Cruz Roja estimó la existencia de alrededor de 450 grupos armados que causaban una "preocupación humanitaria a nivel mundial". Para octubre de ese mismo año, había al menos 210 millones de personas viviendo en áreas controladas por dichos grupos. Pero, ¿Qué tienen en común los Tigres de Liberación de Tamil Eelam, en Sri Lanka, el Ejército de Liberación Nacional, en Colombia, los grupos Mai-Mai, en la República Democrática del Congo, y la Administración Autónoma del Norte y Este de Siria? En un mundo en el que estos actores armados existen (o han existido), y participan activamente en conflictos armados, el presente libro investiga el marco jurídico que regula sus comportamientos y actividades. De esta forma, los diferentes capítulos proponen miradas alternativas al estudio de los grupos armados que, en la mayoría de los casos, son constituidos a partir de la violación al derecho doméstico del Estado.      
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jkatzcogan.bsky.social
New Issue: European Journal of International Law
The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 36, no. 2, May 2025) is out. Contents include: * Editorial * Editorial: EJIL: News!; In This Issue; Book Reviewing: An Opening Note and In This Issue * Articles * Lauge N Skovgaard Poulsen, Beyond Adjudication: Lump Sum Agreements, Economic Hostages and Market Access * Focus: Gender and Violence in International Law * Sandesh Sivakumaran, Crafting the Prohibition on Violence against Women under International Human Rights Law * Rosemary Grey, On Hope, Reform and Risk: The Rome Statute’s Definition of ‘Gender’ and the Crimes Against Humanity Convention * Critical Review of Governance * Louise Chappell & Sarah Easy, The Politics of Gender Justice at the International Criminal Court Redux: 2014–2023 * Roaming Charges * Places with a Soul: East and West: Sometimes the Twain Does Meet * EJIL Debate! * Neil Boister, The ‘General Part’ of Transnational Criminal Law * Kerttuli Lingenfelter, The International Law of General Parts: A Reply to Neil Boister * Critical Review of Jurisprudence * Joseph Finnerty & Başak Çalı, The Travaux Préparatoires and Progressive Treaty Interpretation: Article 18 of the European Convention on Human Rights * Book Reviews * Muhammad Saqib & Yen-Chiang Chang, reviewing Lan Anh T. Nguyen and Hai Dang Vu (eds), Viability of UNCLOS amid Emerging Global Maritime Challenges * Michal Saliternik, reviewing Justin Desautels-Stein, The Right to Exclude: A Critical Race Approach to Sovereignty, Borders, and International Law * Luíza Leão Soares Pereira, reviewing Omri Sender, International Law-Making by the International Court of Justice and International Law Commission: Partnership for Purpose in a Decentralized Legal Order * Kathryn McNeilly, reviewing A. Gattini and M. Dimetto (eds), Time and International Adjudication: The Temporal Factor in Proceedings before International Courts and Tribunals * The Last Page * Gregory Shaffer, Thomas Milton House and the Giant Pagoda Tree
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