SJIL ISSUES
VOLUME 43
1 David Cohen, “Hybrid” Justice in East Timor, Sierre Leone, and Cambodia: “Lessons Learned” and Prospects for the Future, 43 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2007)
2 Robert D. Sloane, The Expressive Capacity of International Punishment: the Limits of the National Law Analogy and the Potential of International Criminal Law, 43 Stan. J Int'l L. 39 (2007)
3 Mark Totten, Using Force First: Moral Tradition and the Case for Revision, 43 Stan. J Int'l L. 95 (2007)
4 Joel Trachtman, The WTO Cathedral, 43 Stan. J Int'l L. 127 (2007)
5 Eric L. Martin, Note: Liberalization and Cravathism: How Liberalization Triggered the Reorganization of the Legal Profession in Germany and Japan, 43 Stan. J Int'l L. 169 (2007)

VOLUME 42
1 John Martin Gillroy, Adjudication Norms, Dispute Settlement Regimes and International Tribunals: The Status of “Environmental Sustainability” in International Jurisprudence, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2006)
2 David Marcus, The Normative Development of Socioeconomic Rights Through Supranational Adjudication, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 53 (2006)
3 Carl F. Minzner, Xinfang: An Alternative to Formal Chinese Legal Institutions, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 103 (2006)
4 Alison Elizabeth Chase, The Politics of Lending and Reform: The International Monetary Fund and the Nation of Egypt, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 193 (2006)
5 Lawrence Jahoon Lee, Barcelona Traction in the 21st Century: Revisiting its Customary and Policy Underpinnings 35 Years Later, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 237 (2006)
6 Charles Tiefer, Can Appropriation Riders Speed Our Exit From Iraq, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 291 (2006)
7 Aparna Sridhar, The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia’s Response to the Problem of Transnational Abduction, 42 Stan. J Int'l L. 343 (2006)

VOLUME 41
1 Jenia Iontcheva Turner, Nationalizing International Criminal Law, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2005)
2 Catherine A. Rogers, Regulating International Arbitrators: A Functional Approach to Developing Standards of Conduct, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 53 (2005)
3 Eugene D. Mazo, Constitutional Roulette: The Russian Parliament’s Battles with the President Over Appointing a Prime Minister, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 123 (2005)
4 Aaron A. Dhir, Human Rights Treaty Drafting Through the Lens of Mental Disability: The Proposed International Convention on Protection and Promotion of the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 181 (2005)
5 Rashmi Dyal-Chand, Reflection in a Distant Mirror: Why the West has Misperceived the Grameen Bank’s Vision of Microcredit, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 217 (2005)
6 Joseph W. Beach, The Saudi Arabian Capital Market Law: A Practical Study of the Creation of Law in Developing Markets, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 307 (2005)
7 Jeremy Perelman, The Way Ahead? Access-to-Justice, Public Interest Lawyering and the Right to Legal Aid in South Africa: The Nkuzi Case, 41 Stan. J Int'l L. 357 (2004)

VOLUME 40
1 Elizabeth M. Bruck, Models Wanted: The Search for an Effective Response to Human Trafficking, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2004)
2 Aeyal M. Gross, The Constitution, Reconciliation, and Transitional Justice: Lessons From South Africa and Israel, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 47 (2004)
3 Nsongurua J. Udombana, Between Promise and Performance: Revisiting States’ Obligations Under the African Himan Rights Charter, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 105 (2004)
4 Benjamin Neaderland, Note: Quandary on the Yalu: International Law, Politicas, and China’s North Korean Refugee Crisis, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 143 (2004)
5 Jenik Radon, Sovereignty: A Political Emotion, Not a Concept, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 195 (2004)
6 Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, Reflections on Sovereignty and Collective Security, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 211 (2004)
7 Paul W. Kahn, The Question of Sovereignty, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 259 (2004)
8 Anne Marie Slaughter, Sovereignty and Power in a Networked World Order, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 283 (2004)
9 Richard H. Steinberg, Who is Sovereign?, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 329 (2004)
10 Paul R. Williams and Francesca Jannotti Pecci, Earned Sovereignty: Bridging the Gap Between Sovereignty and Self-Determination, 40 Stan. J Int'l L. 347 (2004)

VOLUME 39
1 Catherine A. Rogers, Context and Institional Structure in Attorney Regulation: Constructing an Enforcement Regime for International Arbitration, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2003)
2 Amanda Whiting, Situating Suhakam: Human Rights Debates and Malaysia's National Human Rights Commission, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 59 (2003)
3 Duncan DeVille, Practitioner's Comment: Waiving a Red Flag in Court: Obtaining and Using Witness Testimony From the Former Soviet Union, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 99 (2003)
4 Robert S. Mueller III, Jackson H. Ralston Lecture: The FBI's New Mission: Preventing Terrorist Attacks While Protecting Civil Liberties, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 117 (2003)
5 Corene T. Kendrick, Note: The Illegality of Abortion in Mexico, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 125 (2003)
6 Xin Frank He, Regulating Rural-Urban Migrants in Beijing: Institutional Conflict and Ineffective Campaigns, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 177 (2003)
7 Anu Piilola, Assessing Theories of Gloabl Governance: A Case Study of International Antitrust Regulation, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 207 (2003)
8 Christopher C. Wheeler and Amir Attaran, Declawing the Vulture Funds: Rehabilition of a Comity Defense in Sovereign Debt Litigation, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 253 (2003)
9 Richard L. Morningstar, Herman Phleger Lecture: The Three-Dimensional Practice of Law in the International Arena, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 285 (2003)
10 Erik J. Woodhouse, The “Guerra Del Agua” and the Cochabamba Concession: Social Risk and Foreign Direct Investment in Public Infrastructure, 39 Stan. J Int'l L. 295 (2003)

VOLUME 38
1 Kathleen M. Sullivan, Symposium: Expressive Rights in the Information Age—Introduction, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 1 (2002)
2 Julie L. Andsager, A Constant Tension: Public Support for Free Expression , 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 3 (2002)
3 Laura Belin, The Rise and Fall of Russia's NTV , 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 19 (2002)
4 Marwan Dalal, Free Speakers and Their Repression: American Lessons to Israel, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 43 (2002)
5 Jean Marie Kamatali, Freedom of Expression and Its Limitations: The Case of the Rwandan Genocide, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 57 (2002)
6 Iddo Porat & Issachar Rosen-Zvi, Who's Afraid of Channel 7?: Ideological Radio and Freedom of Speech in Israel, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 79 (2002)
7 Gregory J. Wrenn, Cyberspace Is Real, National Borders Are Fiction: The Protection of Expressive Rights Online Through Recognition of National Borders in Cyberspace, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 97 (2002)
8 Itsuko Yamaguchi, Beyond De Facto Freedom: Digital Transformation of Free Speech Theory in Japan, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 109 (2002)
9 Kyu Ho Youm, Freedom of Expression and the Law: Rights and Responsibilities in South Korea, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 123 (2002)
10 Martha Mendoza, No Gun Ri: A Cover-Up Exposed, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 153 (2002)
11 Kent Anderson, An Asian Pinochet?—Not Likely: The Unfulfilled International Law Promise in Japan's Treatment of Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 177 (2002)
12 Eric Talbot Jensen, Computer Attacks on Critical National Infrastructure: A Use of Force Invoking the Right of Self-Defense, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 207 (2002)
13 Jo M. Pasqualucci, Advisory Practice of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Contributing to the Evolution of International Human Rights Law, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 241 (2002)
14 Kerry Creque O'Neill, Note: A New Customary Law of Head of State Immunity?: Hirohito and Pinochet, 38 Stan. J Int'l L. 289 (2002)