امکان دانلود رایگان مقالات مجله حقوق بین الملل میشیگان. سال های 2008 تا 2010
Volume 30. No 1, 2, 3 & 4
International Responsibility and the Admission of States to the United Nations
ASAT-Isfaction: Customary International Law and the Regulation of Anti-Satellite Weapons
Public International Law and Its Territorial Imperative
Bordering Capabilities Versus Borders: Implications for National Borders
Conserving Marine Wildlife Through World Trade Law
Scaling "Local": The Implications of Greenhouse Gas Regulation in San Bernardino County
Migration, Development, and the Promise of CEDAW for Rural Women
Human Security and the Rights of Refugees: Transcending Territorial and Disciplinary Borders
The Shifting Border of Immigration Regulation
Universal Jurisdiction as an International "False Conflict" of Laws
From Pinochet to Rumsfeld: Universal Jurisdiction in Europe 1998-2008
Jurisdiction Without Territory: From the Holy Roman Empire to the Responsibility to Protect
Failures to Punish: Command Responsibility in Domestic and International Law
A Critical Guide to the Iraqi High Tribunal’s Anfal Judgement: Genocide Against the Kurds
Challenging Monohumanism: An Argument for Changing the Way We Think About Intercountry Adoption
Revisiting Germany’s Residenzpflicht in Light of Modern EU Asylum Law
Indigenous Recognition in International Law: Theoretical Observations
Reconstituting Japanese Law: International Norms and Domestic Litigation
Volume 29. No 1, 2, 3 & 4
Institutional Alliances and Derivative Legitimacy
The Victims of Victim Participation in International Criminal Proceedings
"Normalizing" the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling
Competing Legal Cultures and Legal Reform: The Battle of Chile
The E.U. Leniency Program and U.S. Civil Discovery Rules: A Fraternal Fight?
"Change Direction" 2006: Israeli Operations in Lebanon and the International Law of Self-Defense
Are EU Trade Sanctions on Burma Compatible with WTO Law?
Militating Democracy: Comparative Constitutional Perspectives
The Lotus Principle in ICJ Jurisprudence: Was the Ship Ever Afloat?