Friday, August 14, 2015

Jalloh & Elias: Essays in International Law in Honour of Judge Abdul G. Koroma

Charles Chernor Jalloh (Florida International Univ. - Law) & Olufemi Elias (Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) have published Shielding Humanity: Essays in International Law in Honour of Judge Abdul G. Koroma (Brill | Nijhoff 2015). Contents include:
  • P.S. Rao, Judge Abdul Koroma in the Service of Universal International Law
  • Tommy Koh, A Tribute to Abdul Koroma
  • Kenneth Keith, Abdul Koroma: Good Neighbor, Friend and Colleague
  • Kenneth Keith, The Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes: The Rainbow Warrior Affair – Experiences of a Small State
  • Bernado Sepúlveda Amor, The International Court of Justice and the Latin American Experience
  • Abdul Koroma, Territorial Integrity and the Kosovo Opinion John Dugard
  • Karin Oellers-Frahm, Provisional Measures in Interpretation Proceedings – A New Way to Extend the Court’s Jurisdiction? The Practice of the Court in the Avena and Temple of Preah Vihear Cases
  • Obiora Chinedu Okafor & Chikeziri Igwe, Twailing the Bakassi Case: Colonialist Logic, Self-Determining Agents and the Concept of Legitimate Statehood in our Time
  • Phoebe Okowa, The International Court and the Legacy of the Barcelona Traction Case in the Field of Diplomatic Protection
  • Sienhoo Yee, The Competition between and among Intrinsic and Instrumental Values in Selected Competing Visions of the World
  • Babafemi Akinrinade, Democratizing International Law-Making
  • Surya P. Subedi, An Innovative Solution to an Ambitious Project: Dispute Resolution in the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea
  • Osman Keh Kamara, An Analysis of the Adequacy of the Dispute Settlement Mechanism Under Unclos: Maritime Boundary Delimitation Disputes
  • Laurence Boisson de Chazournes & Brian Mcgarry, Constitutional Law and the Settlement of Investor-State Disputes: Some Interplays
  • Konstantinos D Magliveras, Legal Aspects of Competition between International Organizations
  • Christopher Greenwood, The International Court of Justice and International Humanitarian Law
  • Manuel J. Ventura, The Prevention of Genocide as A Jus Cogens Norm? A Formula for Lawful Humanitarian Intervention
  • Avitus A. Agbor, A Reflection on the Phrase “Widespread or Systematic” As Part of the Definition of Crimes Against Humanity
  • Tamara Cummings-John, Justice and Gender: Prosecuting Gender-Based and Sexual Violence Crimes at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Adejoké Babington-Ashaye, International Crimes, Immunities and the Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol of the Merged African Court: Some Observations
  • Abdul Tejan-Cole, Africa and the International Criminal Court: Legitimacy and Credibility Challenges
  • Charles Chernor Jalloh & Andrew Morgan, International Criminal Justice Processes in Rwanda and Sierra Leone: Lessons for Liberia
  • Abdulqawi A. Yusuf, The Public Law of Africa and International Law: Broadening the Scope of Application of International Rules and Enriching Them for Intra- Africa Purposes
  • Tiyanjana Maluwa, The Development and Enforcement of Community Law in the African Regional Economic Communities: Conceptual Issues, Architecture and Institutions
  • Olajumoke O. Oduwole, Africa’s Contribution to the Advancement of the Right to Development in International Law
  • Adeotola Onayemi & Olufemi Elias, Aspects of Africa’s Contribution to the Development of International Law
  • Vincent O. Nmehielle, The African Union and Questions Arising from Efforts to Resolve the Ivorian and Libyan Conflicts
  • Lydia A. Nkansah, Democratic Succession in Africa: The Quest for an Orderly Transition
  • Gino J. Naldi, Secession: The African Experience
  • Mia Swart, Can Regional and Sub-Regional African Courts Strengthen the Rule of Law in Africa? Questions of Impact and Enforcement
  • Charles Manga Fombad & Madeleine Choe-Amusimo Fombad, Rethinking Anti-Corruption Strategies in Africa: Constitutional Entrenchment as Basis for Credible and Effective Anti-Corruption Clean-Ups