This year, we brought together a panel of excellent scholars to discuss International Law and Women’s Rights. We were proud to present the following Essays in our 2024 fall symposium. "Addressing Femicide through International Criminal Law: The Need for a Binding Legal Framework," by Alessia Nicastro "Examining the Efficacy of International Legal Mechanisms in Safeguarding Women's Rights: A Critical Analysis in the Context of Afghan Women’s Rights Under Taliban Rule," by Roqia Samim "Feminist Treaty Interpretation: A Tool Toward the Progressive Feministization of International Law," by Sissy Katsoni "Mothers of the Disappeared in Latin America and the Impact of Maternal Activism in the Development of International Law," by Carolina Lozano Martínez, Xilene Margarita Díaz Palacio, and Manuel Eduardo Góngora Mera We would like to thank the Gruber Program for Global Justice and Women’s Rights for their generous support.
Yale Journal of International Law
Book and Periodical Publishing
New Haven, Connecticut 1,917 followers
A preeminent law journal publishing scholarship about international, transnational, and comparative law.
About us
The Yale Journal of International Law (YJIL) is one of the world’s preeminent international law journals. YJIL publishes articles, essays, notes, and commentary on a wide range of subjects in the fields of international, transnational, and comparative law on a biannual basis. Since November 2009, the Journal has published shorter analytical essays in YJIL Online, an online companion journal. In both its print and online editions, YJIL is committed to publishing cutting-edge, provocative, and thoughtful scholarship at the forefront of the field.
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https://www.yjil.yale.edu
External link for Yale Journal of International Law
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- Book and Periodical Publishing
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- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- New Haven, Connecticut
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- Nonprofit
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127 Wall St
New Haven, Connecticut 06511, US
Employees at Yale Journal of International Law
Updates
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The Yale Journal of International Law is pleased to announce our Fall 2024 Symposium on International Law and Women's Rights at 4:10 pm on October 24. We are excited to host an incredible panel of international law scholars from around the world. Our panelists' contributions include discussions of international legal protections against femicide, gender apartheid in Afghanistan, feminist treaty interpretation, and maternal activism in Latin America: - Addressing Femicide through International Criminal Law: The Need for a Binding Legal Framework, by Alessia Nicastro - Examining the Efficacy of International Legal Mechanisms in Safeguarding Women's Rights: A Critical Analysis in the Context of Afghan Women’s Rights Under Taliban Rule, by Roqia Samim - Feminist Treaty Interpretation: A Tool Toward the Progressive Feministization of International Law, by Sissy Katsoni - Mothers of the Disappeared in Latin America and the Impact of Maternal Activism in the Development of International Law, by Carolina Lozano Martínez, Xilene Margarita Díaz Palacio, and Manuel Eduardo Góngora Mera Our panelists will discuss their contributions and take questions. All members of the YLS community are welcome to attend and participate. We will publish these contributions on our website after the symposium.
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In this piece, Harold Hongju Koh discusses the Yale School of International Law and its focus in the next phase of the twenty-first century. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/eCWm7ZZu
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In this piece, Aloysius Llamzon and Abhik Chakraborty discuss the reciprocity dialectic in transnational corruption. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/e_6RSwpZ
The Reciprocity Dialectic in Transnational Corruption
https://www.yjil.yale.edu
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In this piece, Brian Richardson discusses comity and the criminal law by reflecting on prosecutorial legitimacy in Michael Reisman's world public order. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/emkB3DEM
Comity and the Criminal Law
https://www.yjil.yale.edu
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In this piece, Jacob Katz Cogan discusses two approaches—regulatory and abolitionist—to economic coercion. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/eviP6zr4
Two Approaches to Economic Coercion
https://www.yjil.yale.edu
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In this piece, James E. Baker discusses intelligence and collective security by applying Michael Reisman's scholarship. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/efWm8zBn
Reisman’s Rules: Placing Intelligence and Collective Security in Context
https://www.yjil.yale.edu
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In this piece, Jingxia SHI discusses the future of WTO from the perspective of world order. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/eJdgkeaF
The Quest for the Future of the WTO
https://www.yjil.yale.edu
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In this piece, Guiguo Wang discusses the contributions of the New Haven School and Chinese traditional culture to the notion of right to development. This is part of the Yale Journal of International Law’s 50th Anniversary Conference: Celebrating the Work of W. Michael Reisman. https://lnkd.in/e4SrWkuh
The Right to Development
https://www.yjil.yale.edu