AJIL is a leading peer-reviewed journal, published quarterly since 1907. It features articles, essays, editorial comments, current developments, and book reviews by pre-eminent scholars and practitioners from around the world addressing developments in public and private international law and foreign relations law. The Journal also contains analyses of decisions by national and international courts and tribunals as well as a section on contemporary U.S. practice in international law. AJIL and AJIL Unbound are indispensable for all professionals working in international law, economics, trade, and foreign affairs.
CONTENIDO
Editorial
Introduction to Special Issue
Recent Books on International Law: Edited by Jeffrey L. Dunoff
Review Essay
The Scourge of War
The Rise and Fall of Lauterpacht’s Function of Law
Silicon Sovereigns: Artificial Intelligence, International Law, and the Tech-Industrial Complex
Pax Economica and Its Discontents
From Necropolitics to Piety: TWAIL and the “Other” Subject of Human Rights
Dystopian International Law
On the Stories We Tell
Colonialism and Decolonization on a World Scale—Three Perspectives
Whoever Rules the Waves Rules the World: Sea Power and the Law of the Sea
China, Anti-hegemonism, and the Scope for International Law to Facilitate Peaceful Power Transitions
Is Another World Possible?
Current Developments
The International Law Commission’s Seventy-Sixth (2025) Session: The Negative Impact of the United Nations’ Fiscal Crisis on The Codification and Progressive Development of International Law
International Decisions: Edited by Olabisi D. Akinkugbe
Modern Slavery in Furukawa. Case No. 1072-21-JP/24
Junefield Gold Investments Limited v. The Republic of Ecuador. PCA Case No. 2023-35
Semenya v. Switzerland. Application No. 10934/21
International Organizations
Contemporary Practice of the United States Relating to International Law: Edited by Jacob Katz Cogan
Secretary of State Rubio Denies and Revokes Visas for Palestinian Delegation Invited to Attend UN General Assembly Meetings
Use of Force, Arms Control, and Non-proliferation
Case Report
The U.S. Military Targets and Destroys Alleged Narcotics Trafficking Vessels in the Southern Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean, Killing Nearly All of Their Crew

