19.1
Summer
2018

Print
Article
19.1
“Virtual” Disenfranchisement: Cyber Election Meddling in the Grey Zones of International Law
Michael N. Schmitt
Professor of International Law, University of Exeter; Charles H. Stockton Professor, Stockton Center, U.S. Naval War College; Francis Lieber Distinguished Scholar, Lieber Institute, U.S. Military Academy at West Point; Senior Fellow, NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence; Director, Tallinn Manuals Project, 2009–2017.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author in his personal capacity. The author thanks Mr. John Hursh, Editor-in-Chief of International Law Studies and Associate Director for Research at the Stockton Center, for his invaluable comments.

Print
Article
19.1
Article 158(3) of the Hong Kong Basic Law and the Preliminary Reference Procedure of the European Union
Patrick Jiang
B.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2008; J.D. Boston University School of Law 2011; LL.M. University College London 2012); C.V. Starr Lecturer at the Peking University School of Transnational Law.
Gonzalo Villalta Puig
Head of the School of Law and Politics and Professor of Law at The University of Hull. He is the inaugural holder of the University of Hull established Chair in the Law of Economic Integration for his research into the economic constitution of the European Union and other non-unitary market jurisdictions. He was formerly Professor of Law and Outstanding Fellow of the Faculty of Law at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, which he served as Associate Dean (Research).
Print
Comment
19.1
Expanding Notions of Self-Determination: International Customs of Informed Consent in Medical Experimentation Pre-1945
Laurel Hattix
J.D. Candidate, 2019, The University of Chicago Law School.

I would like to express immense gratitude for each individual who read, edited, and offered critique throughout the research and writing process. I am particularly grateful for the feedback and support of Professor Tom Ginsburg. Additionally, I would like to thank Holly Berlin, Wallace Feng, and Benjamin Moss, as well as the entire CJIL Board, for their guidance and feedback during this process.

I. Introduction 

Print
Comment
19.1
Taking “Great Care”: Defining Victims of Hate Speech Targeting Religious Minorities
Whittney Barth
J.D. Candidate, 2019, The University of Chicago Law School; M.Div., 2011, Harvard Divinity School; B.A., 2008, Miami University (Oxford, Ohio).

The author would like to thank both the editors of the Chicago Journal of International Law for their feedback and support and Professor Lior Strahilevitz, Sidley Austin Professor of Law at the University of Chicago, who served as faculty advisor for this Comment. Any errors are my own.