Launched in 1965, the Australian Year Book of International Law (AYBIL) is Australiaâs longest standing and most prestigious dedicated international law publication.
The Year Book aims to uniquely combine scholarly commentary with contributions from Australian government officials. Each volume contains a mix of scholarly articles, invited lectures, book reviews, notes of decisions by Australian and international courts, recent legislation, and collected Australian international law state practice.
It is a valuable resource for those working in the field of international law, including government officials, international organisation officials, non-government and community organisations, legal practitioners, academics and other researchers, as well as students studying international law, international relations, human rights and international affairs.
It focuses on Australian practice in international law and general international law, across a broad range of sub-fields including human rights, environmental law and legal theory, which are of interest to international lawyers worldwide. Volume 37 features a Tobacco Plain Packaging Agora.
Kirby Lecture in International Law 2019
ââKJ Keith
The Sir Elihu Lauterpacht International Law Lecture 2018
The Development of Humanity as a Constraint on the Conduct of War
ââTim McCormack, Siobhain Galea and Daniel Westbury
ANZSIL Conference Keynote 2019
Climate Change, the Critical Decade and the Rule of Law
ââChristina Voigt
Tobacco Plain Packaging Agora
Public Health, Intellectual Property, and the Trade and Investment Law Challenges to Australia and Uruguayâs Tobacco Packaging Laws
ââSuzanne Zhou and Jonathan Liberman
âTobacco Plain Packaging and the Expanding Role of the WTO in Regulatory Oversight
ââBenn McGrady
âTobacco, Health and Investor-State Dispute Settlement: Australiaâs Recent Treaty Practice
ââTania Voon
âAustraliaâs Approach to ISDS Reform in Light of Philip Morris Asia v Australia
ââEmma Boland and Andrea Gronke
Articles
Truncheons and Tenterhooks: Civil Suits against Foreign Officials in Common-law Jurisdictions
ââLee Walker
Joint Development of Offshore Oil and Gas Resources in the South China Sea âNew Contexts for Regional Cooperation Following the South China SeaâArbitration
âJohn Abrahamson
Notes br/> A Sinking Feeling: The Effect of Sea Level Rise on Baselines and Statehood in the Western Pacific
ââJessica Reynolds br/> Book Reviews: Edited by Sarah McCosker
Oppenheimâs International Law: United Nations
ââRosalyn Higgins, Philippa Webb, Dapo Akande, Sandesh Sivakumaran, and James Sloan (eds)
The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals
ââTheresa Squatrito, Oran R Young, Andreas Follesdal and Geir Ulfstein (eds)
Some Kind of Justice: The ICTYâs Impact in Bosnia and Serbia
ââDiane Orentlicher
Modification of Treaties by Subsequent Practice
âIrina Buga
Environmental Protection and Transitions from Conflict to Peace
ââCarsten Stahn, Jens Iverson and Jennifer S Easterday (eds)
Regular Features
Cases Before Australian Courts and Tribunals Concerning Questions of Public International Law 2018
ââAlison Pert, Claire Ho, Isabelle James, Charlotte Lewis, Brendan Ma, James Tanna, Caterina Presutti, Arvind Sharma and Fayette Vermeer
Cases before International Courts and Tribunals Concerning Questions of Public International Law Involving Australia 2018
ââAlison Pert, Claire Ho, Charlotte Lewis, Brendan Ma, Kenny Ng, Caterina Presutti and James Tanna
Australian Legislation Concerning Matters of International Law 2018
ââTrina Malone, Nicole Lyas, Merryn Cavenagh, Andrea Gronke, Kryssa Karavolas, Angad Keith, Tess Kluckow, Ameisa Konneh, Maida Kopic, Alicia Lewis, Fatima Malik, Pranamie Mandalawatta, Holly Matley, Alex Norris, Nish Perera, Sephora Scott, Vaidehi Subramanyan, Ashlee Uren and Kashpee Wahid
Australian Practice in International Law 2018
Developments in Australian Private International Law 2018â2019
ââAndrew Lu, Rob Leonard, Thinesh Thillainadarajah, Shahn Paterson, Emma Squires and Edward Lee
âTreaty Action 2018
Table of Cases
Table of Statutes
Table of International Instruments
Those working in the field of international law, including government officials, international organisation officials, non-government and community organisations, legal practitioners, academics and other researchers, as well as students studying international law, international relations, human rights and international affairs.