New Zealand Yearbook of International Law

Volume 20, 2022

Series: 

Volume Editors: and
The New Zealand Yearbook of International Law is an annual, internationally refereed publication whose purpose is to provide a yearly reference for legal materials and critical commentary on issues of international law. The Yearbook also serves as a valuable tool to identify trends, state practice, and policies in the development of international law in New Zealand, the Pacific region, the Southern Ocean, and Antarctica, and to generate scholarship in those fields. In addition to presenting peer-reviewed legal research, the Yearbook contains an annual ‘Year-in-Review’ that covers developments in international law of particular interest to New Zealand, and a dedicated section on the South Pacific.

This Yearbook covers the period 1 January 2022 to 31 December 2022.

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Dr David J Jefferson is a Senior Lecturer Above the Bar at the University of Canterbury School of Law, where he teaches Environmental Law, Land Law, and Intellectual Property. David is a legal anthropologist whose research covers a range of issues related to biodiversity conservation, biotechnology regulation, intellectual property in the agricultural and food sectors, ecosystem rights laws, and the protection of Indigenous knowledge systems. The field sites where David works are in Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia, and the Andean Community of South America. He holds a PhD in Law from the University of Queensland (2019) and a JD from the University of California, Davis (2014). David has been the recipient of several competitive research awards, including a United States Fulbright fellowship (2016) for work in Ecuador.

Christian Riffel, PhD (2014), Bern, is Professor of International Economic Law at the University of Canterbury, Aotearoa New Zealand. He is editor of the WTO TRIPS Commentary (Brill) and contributor to the Encyclopedia of Public International Law. In addition, he is Co-Chair of the International Economic Law Interest Group of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law and a member of the International Law Association Committee on Rule of Law and International Investment Law. Chris is on the list of suitable arbitrators for EU trade agreements and also serves as the Honorary Consul of Germany in the South Island of New Zealand.
Preface

List of Tables

Part 1
Articles and Commentaries
1 Preserving Statehood through Population and Government: Safeguarding Nationality and Franchise in the Context of Sea-Level Rise and Mobility
   Jane McAdam

2 “Equal in Status, in No Way Subordinate”: Interwar New Zealand, Imperial Internationalism, and the Acquisition of International Legal Personality
   Taran Molloy

3 Braiding Boomerangs: A Reappraisal of the Law of Conquest in 1788
   Samuel White

4 A Lost Generation: Children Detained in Al-Hol and Their Repatriation under International Law
   Kendall Mead

Part 2
The South Pacific
5 Pacific Islands Forum – 2022
   Tony Angelo and Sarina Theys

Part 3
The Year in Review
6 International Human Rights Law 2022
   Cassandra Mudgway and Lida Ayoubi

7 Indigenous Peoples’ Rights under International Law: 2021 and 2022
   Tracey Whare

8 International Economic Law
   An Hertogen

9 International Environmental Law
   Vernon Rive

10 Law of the Sea and Fisheries
   Joanna Mossop

11 The Antarctic Treaty System
   Alan D Hemmings

12 International Criminal Law and Humanitarian Law
   Treasa Dunworth

13 International Law and Security
   Anna Hood

14 New Zealand State Conduct, Treaty Action and Implementation
   Mark Gobbi

All interested in any aspect of international law, from legal academics, lawyers, government officials, policy makers and students of international law.
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