Texas International Law Journal, Volume 52, Number 1, Spring 2017 Page: II
195 p.View a full description of this periodical.
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Texas International Law Journal
In the rapidly expanding discipline of international law, the Texas International
Law Journal helps readers stay abreast and informed of recent developments and
new scholarship by providing access to leading international legal, theoretical, and
policy analysis. 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 editors and staff aim to fulfill these needs
by concentrating on groundbreaking articles that will be useful to both practitioners
and scholars. We hope you enjoy this latest issue.
The Journal is among the oldest and best-established student-published
international law journals in the United States. In the wake of the Bay of Pigs
disaster and the Cuban Missile Crisis, our publication began as an offshoot of the
Texas International Law Society. In January 1965, under the guidance of Professor
E. Ernest Goldstein, we planted the Texas flag in the international arena with our
first issue, entitled The Journal of the University of Texas International Law Society.
Publications thereafter were biannual, taking the name Texas International Law
Forum until. summer 1971, when the Journal adopted its present title and began
publishing three or four issues per year. Of the more than one hundred student-
published international law journals across the country, only three schools have an
older international heritage: Harvard, Columbia, and Virginia.
Over the years, the Journal staff has made the most of its established heritage.
We have developed international repute by forging close ties with numerous scholars
and authors worldwide. As a result, we receive over six hundred unsolicited
manuscripts each year and are extremely selective in our publication choices. This
position has helped us develop one of the largest student-published subscription
circulations of any international law journal in the United States. The Journal's
subscription base includes law schools, government entities, law firms, corporations,
embassies, international organizations, and individuals from virtually every state in
the U.S. and more than forty-five countries.
With over thirty editorial board members and more than eighty staff members
made up of full-time J.D. and LL.M. students, the Journal maintains a refined and
well-organized editing process. 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.
DISTINGUISHED AUTHORS
The Journal has been fortunate to publish articles from a number of eminent
scholars, including:
The Honorable William O. Douglas, former Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States; W. Page Keeton, former dean of the University of Texas School of Law;
Thomas Buergenthal, former president of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights;
Charles Alan Wright, former professor at the University of Texas School of Law, co-
author of the leading treatise Federal Practice and Procedure, and former president of
the American Law Institute; Louis Henkin, former president of the American Society
of International Law, chief reporter of the Restatement of Foreign Relations Law of the
1. B. Ernest Goldstein, Thank You Fidel! Or How the International Law Society and the Texas
International Law Journal Were Born, 30 TEX. INT'L L.J. 223 (1995).
ii
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University of Texas at Austin. School of Law. Texas International Law Journal, Volume 52, Number 1, Spring 2017, periodical, Spring 2017; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1033012/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.