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  • International crimes History of international criminal law Africa and Icc Current situations before the ICC Criminology of Internation crimes Western Asia and the ICC International criminal court Philosophical foundations of international criminal law
  • EDITORIALS TEAM

    Akshay kumar

    Nehal Bhuta is Professor of International Law at the University of Edinburgh. He was Professor of International Law at the European University Institute (2012-2018). He is a member of the Board of Editors of the European Journal of International.

    Editor

    Ranveer Singh

    Prof. Dr. Diane Desierto (JSD, Yale) is Professor of Law and Global Affairs, Human Rights LLM Faculty Director, and Founding Director of the Global Human Rights Clinic at Notre Dame Law School, with a joint appointment at the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame (USA).

    Editor

    Alia Bhatt

    Justina Uriburu is a Lecturer in International Law at the University of Manchester and an Associate Editor of EJIL: Talk!.

    Contributing Editor

    Arjun Kapur

    Nehal Bhuta is Professor of International Law at the University of Edinburgh. He was Professor of International Law at the European University Institute (2012-2018)

    Associate Editor

    About

    EJIL already has a homepage www.ejil.org, the autonomous website of the European Journal of International Law. Our website was a pioneer long before publishers such as our current publisher, OUP, moved into digital journal publishing, and it is distinct from all other mainline journals of which we are aware. Not only is a sizeable portion of current content made free to the reader, but all content becomes free one year after publication – the scholarly world’s Napster! I say all this to indicate that we are not parvenus to the notion of digital internet publishing.The decision to experiment with a blog – and an experiment it is – was decidedly not a bandwagon effect – they all have it, so should we. It is the result of serious reflection of the Editorial Board, with our Scientific Advisory Board, on the evolving relationship between traditional and digital forms of scholarship and publishing. In its first twenty years, EJIL from time to time made huge efforts to provide ‘services’ e.g. the now defunct service on decisions of the ECJ on matters of International Law or our running commentary on decisions of the WTO Appellate Body of importance to public international lawyers.

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