St. John’s Journal of International and Comparative Law (JICL) is a student-edited online journal featuring scholarly articles and student notes and comments on emergent issues of international and comparative law. Published biannually, JICL offers a dynamic forum where members of the academy, the bar and the judiciary, as well as Journal members, publish articles and essays of timely concern on nearly any legal issue that touches on international, comparative or transnational topics. Members have the opportunity to work under the guidance of the Journal's faculty advisors and editors to produce a work of publishable quality for consideration by JICL and the New York International Law Review. (This journal is no longer actively published.)
Volume 5, Spring 2015, Issue 2
Articles
Is U.S. Operational Self-Defense a State Practice Creating New Customary International Law?
Major Yevgeny S. Vindman
Combating Trade Secret Theft by Foreign State-Owned Entities: An International Law Approach
Griffin M. Barnett
Monitoring and Evaluation of International Counter-Trafficking Programs: Definitions, Challenges, and a Way Forward
Norman L. Greene