NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics

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NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics

NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics

@NYUJILP

Founded in 1968, the NYU Journal of International Law & Politics is one of the nation's oldest student-run international law publications.

New York, NY Katılım Mart 2012
341 Takip Edilen787 Takipçiler
NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics
featured in this Volume. Please submit your political cartoon(s) as an email to nyujilp@gmail.com. Submissions relating to our Spring Articles and Symposium Topic, "Successes in International Law," are highly encouraged.
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The NYU Journal of International Law & Politics is currently accepting submissions for Volume 59 of the Journal. Please submit your manuscript and CV through Scholastica or send us an email at nyujilp@gmail.com. We are also currently accepting political cartoon submissions to be
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NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics
The NYU Journal of International Law and Politics (JILP) is excited to share our Volume 58 Masthead for the 2025-2026 year! Please join us in welcoming this fantastic team as we embark on another year of publishing scholarship. Fore more information, see: nyujilp.org
NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics tweet media
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NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics
NYU JILP is currently accepting submissions for Volume 58. Please submit your manuscript and CV through Scholastica or email us at nyujilp@gmail.com. We are also accepting political cartoon submissions to be featured in Volume 58. Please email cartoons to nyujilp@gmail.com.
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NYU's Journal of International Law and Politics is now accepting submissions for our Spring 2025 Symposium Issue. The issue will feature articles that touch on borders and migration. Submit on Scholastica or to nyujilp@gmail.com today!
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We are now open for article submissions! If you have any questions regarding the article submission process, please reach out to nyujilp@gmail.com.
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vehicle for assessing harms caused by the pandemic in a cautious and proportional manner focused on avoiding future harms. Full article out this spring! (3/3)
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analyzing the applicability of the Transboundary Harm Principle, a customary international law norm traditionally used in environmental law, to the pandemic. Issue out soon! The article analyzes how the framework codified in the Trail Smelter Arbitration can serve as a (2/3)
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nytimes.com/2023/02/26/us/… In light of news from the US Energy Department that a lab leak likely caused the pandemic, read JILP's upcoming article in Vol 55.2, Pandemic as a Transboundary Harm: Lessons from the Trail Smelter Arbitration, by Professor Russell Miller of @wlulaw (1/3)
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NYU J. Int'l Law & Politics
Thank you @nyuiilj, @nyujilp, @nyulaw, Herbert Rubin and Justice Rose Luttan Rubin, Judge Pauline Newman, the Pauline Newman Program, and all of our distinguished speakers for a great symposium!
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Sharifah Sekalala @sharifasekalala is still optimistic that as we start paying corporations for these vaccines, we will have an opportunity to reflect and say "we can do it differently the next time."
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To have a situation where a formerly colonized country has to rely on its former colonizer for access to a vaccine is a problem -- NYU Law 3L, Navya Dasari describing the issue with donation-based models to distribute vaccines.
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Tahir Amin @realtahiramin explains that no one dives deeper into the 1970s to discuss how the TRIPS agreement came into being and how that shaped where we are today.
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Jack Jin Gary Lee @LeeJackJin_Gary presents work that takes us on a historical journey from Smallpox Vaccination through Contagion in the Straits Settlements (work co-authored with Lynette Chua).
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Katarina Sydow explains that States' failure to cooperate and negotiate with COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers on a bilateral agreement allowed powerful State actors to occupy the field and exclude other less powerful actors from access to certain vaccines.
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