Print ISSN: 1572-3739, Online ISSN: 1572-3747
The International Organizations Law Review is a peer-reviewed journal that only publishes articles that have passed through an anonymous review process.
After the Second World War, the law of international organizations developed as a separate, but not separable, discipline within the sphere of public international law. The International Organizations Law Review functions as a discussion forum for both academics and practitioners active in this discpline. The Review offers two foci: one based in the world of scholarship and the other in the world of practice. Academic scholarship offered in the Review will focus on general and theoretical developments in international institutional law, while practitioner views offer a forum to identify and discuss legal developments within existing international organizations.
CONTENIDO
The Contribution of International Organizations to the Formation, Interpretation and Identification of International Law
Questions Arising from the Work of the International Law Commission
Author: Janina Barkholdt
The WIPO-WTO Relationship
Moving beyond the Forum-Shifting Theory?
Author: Gabriele Gagliani
The Controversial Role of Litigation in the Struggle to Revive Individual Access to the Tribunal of the Southern African Development Community
Author: Erika de Wet
Liberty of Entering in International Agreements and Compliance of International Obligations
Some Remarks Alongside the South African Courts’ Judgments on the sadc Tribunal
Author: Elisa Tino
Susan Block-Lieb and Terence C. Halliday, Global Lawmakers: International Organizations in the Crafting of World Markets
Author: Ondřej Svoboda