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Guest Editorial: Ten Years of ESIL -- Reflections; European Hypocrisy: TTIP and ISDS; Masthead Changes; Roll of Honour; Christmas Reading? Christmas Gifts? Some Suggestions from the Editor-in-Chief

  • Autores: Joseph H. H. Weiler
  • Localización: European journal of international law = Journal europeen de droit international, ISSN 0938-5428, Vol. 25, Nº 4, 2014, págs. 961-975
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • From time to time, we are asked about the relationship between EJIL and the European Society of International Law (ESIL). That relationship is simple: the Journal and the Society are two separate, but mutually supportive and complementary entities. Indeed, past and present EJIL Editors can boast, with parental pride, of having been present at the conception, as well as the birth, of the Society! From its inception, membership in ESIL has included automatic online and print subscriptions to EJIL - including very soon a tablet version.The relationship has only strengthened in recent years, with ESIL Presidents and Presidents-elect serving ex officio on the EJIL Board. It is in the spirit of that growing bond that we wholeheartedly share in ESIL's 10-year celebrations, and have invited the following Guest Editorial from its leadership.

      Guest Editorial: Ten Years of ESIL - Reflections Ten years ago, the European Society of International Law (ESIL) organized its Inaugural Conference in Florence. Some papers were later published in the Baltic Yearbook of International Law but, other than that, most presentations at the event have long been forgotten. Yet that event was one of those moments where the participants still proudly recall that they were there: yes, I was there in Florence when ESIL started, I was there when the seed was planted.

      Ten years later, although ESIL has matured rapidly with the development of a wide array of activities, the Society is still in its formative stage. There is a real sense that ESIL is beginning to realize its enormous potential for understanding and influencing international law in Europe and throughout the world. But this is not a self-propelling process. On a day-to-day basis, critical choices have to be made on the directions in which the Society can and should evolve.


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