This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law (NYIL) is the fiftieth in the Series, which means that the NYIL has now been with us for half a century. The editors decided not to let this moment go by unnoticed, but to devote this year’s edition to an analysis of the phenomenon of yearbooks in international law. Once the decision was made that this would be the subject of this year’s NYIL, the editors asked themselves a number of questions. For instance: Not many academic disciplines have yearbooks, so what is the reason we do? What is the added value of having a yearbook alongside the abundance of international law journals, regular monographs and edited volumes that are published on a yearly basis? Does the existence of yearbooks tell us something about who we are, or who we think we are, or what we have to contribute to the world? These questions will be addressed both in a general and in a specific sense, whereby a number of yearbooks published all over the world will be looked at in further detail. The Netherlands Yearbook of International Law was first published in 1970. It offers a forum for the publication of scholarly articles in a varying thematic area of public international law.
International Journal of Constitutional Law 13 (2):434–62 Medina N, Alfaro S (eds) (2015) Pentecostals and ... Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 87–105 Offutt S (2015) New Centers of Global Evangelicalism in Latin America and Africa.
Netherlands yearbook of international law
The 1991 Netherlands Yearbook of International Law contains expert articles on issues such as: mercenaries, country-oriented human rights protection by the UN Commission on Human Rights; dispute settlement arrangements in investment ...
Contains an extensive review of Dutch state practice from the parliamentary year,1998-1999.
This book engages with international legal responses to the global environmental crisis.
This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law (NYIL) addresses the question how the assumption that states have a common obligation to achieve a collective public good can be reconciled with the fact that the 195 states of ...
This volume contains an extensive review of Dutch state practice from the parliamentary year 2000 2001.
This volume includes eight articles, in the domains of human rights law, migration law, environmental law, international criminal law, WTO law and European law, reflecting upon these pertinent questions, basically asking: do international ...
Contains an extensive review of Dutch state practice from the parliamentary year,1998-1999.
This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law aims to do exactly that by asking the question of how international law reacts to various types of temporary issues.