Vol. 45 No. 1-2, September 2012
Index
- Power and constraint: national security law after the 2012 election.
- An insufficiently accountable presidency: some reflections on Jack Goldsmith's 'Power and Constraint'.
- Executive power in a war without end: Goldsmith, the erosion of executive authority on detention, and the end of the War on Terror.
- War without end? Legal wrangling without end.
- Presidential foreign policy: an opportunity for international law education.
- The War Powers Resolution at 40: still an unconstitutional, unnecessary, and unwise fraud that contributed directly to the 9/11 attacks.
- The War Powers Resolution and public opinion.
- The War Powers Resolution - a dim and fading legacy.
- Inadvertent implications of the War Powers Resolution.
- The United States' use of drones in the War on Terror: the (il)legality of targeted killings under international law.
- America's drone wars.
- Targeted killing: when proportionality gets all out of proportion.
- Rightly dividing the domestic jihadist from the enemy combatant in the 'war against al-Qaeda': why it matters in rendition and targeted killing.
- Climate change, presidential power, and leadership: 'we can't wait'.
- Climate change, presidential power, and leadership: 'we can't wait'.
- The president and international financial regulation.
- Comparing the approaches of the presidential candidates.
- Thoughts on Medellin v. Texas.
- A tragi-comedy of errors erodes self-execution of treaties: Medellin v. Texas and beyond.
- The politicization of judgment enforcement.
- War powers, foreign affairs, and the courts: some institutional considerations.
- United States ratification of the Law of the Sea Convention: securing our navigational future while managing China's blue water ambitions.
- Preventing mass atrocity crimes: the responsibility to protect and the Syria crisis.
- Reflections from the International Criminal Court prosecutor.
- Cyberwar and unmanned aerial vehicles: using new technologies, from espionage to action.
- Lending an 'invisible hand' to the navy: armed guards as a free market assistance to defeating piracy.
- Somebody else's problem: how the United States and Canada violate international law and fail to ensure the prosecution of war criminals.