Chow Pok Yin Stephenson, University of Hong Kong Promptly Notifying Infectious Diseases Likely to Cause Pandemics: Individual State Responsibility, Shared Collective Burden Latest Scholarship The International Court of Justice and Ethnic Conflicts: Challenges and Opportunitiesĭr. As economic integration accelerates and nations forge closer ties in the new millennium, we are confident the Journal will continue to provide a significant contribution to the burgeoning field of international law. students from the University of Texas School of Law, the Journal maintains a refined and well-organized editing process. With an editorial board and staff made up of full-time J.D. The Journal’s subscription base includes law schools, government entities, law firms, corporations, embassies, international organizations, and individuals from virtually every state in the United States and dozens of countries.
This position has helped us develop one of the largest student-published subscription circulations of any international law journal in the United States. As a result, we receive more than six hundred unsolicited manuscripts each year and are extremely selective in our publication choices. We have developed international repute by forging close ties with numerous scholars and authors worldwide. Over the years, the Journal staff has made the most of its established heritage. The editors and staff aim to fulfill these needs by concentrating on groundbreaking articles that will be useful to both practitioners and scholars.
The Journal publishes academic articles, essays, and student notes in the areas of public and private international law, international legal theory, the law of international organizations, comparative and foreign law, and domestic laws with significant international implications. The Texas International Law Journal is a student-run organization that delivers leading scholarship related to international legal, theoretical, and policy analysis.