1. Collective Complaints Under the European Social Charter: Encouraging Progress?2. The European Convention on Human Rights and Extradition3. In Search of Clarity: Non Liquet and International Law4. Constitutionalization’ of International Law: A Sceptical Voice5. The Nature of State Obligations in Relation to Child Labour: Choosing Prosecution over Protection6. Shadows in the Cave: The Nature of International Law when it Appears before English Courts7. International Organisations and International Human Rights Law: One Giant Leap for Humankind8. I m p u t a b i l i t y a n d I m mu n i t y a s S e p a r a t e C o n c e p t s : Th e Remova l of I mmunity from Civil Proceedings Relating to the Commission of an Inter national Cr ime9. Neither Here Nor There? The Status of International Criminal Jurisprudence in the International and UK Legal Orders10. Killing Many to Save a Few? Preliminary Thoughts about Avoiding Collateral Civilian Damage by Assassination of Regime Elites11. Conduct and Proof of Conduct — Two Fundamental Conditions for the Imposition of Criminal Liability12. State Identity and Genocide: The Bosnian Genocide Case13. Explosive Remnants of the War between Eritrea and Ethiopia14. International Law and the Violence of Non-State Actors15. The ‘Disordered Medley’ of International Tribunals and the Coherence of International Law16. Countermeasures: Concept and Substance in the Protection of Collective Interests17. Does the Optional Clause Still Matter?18. Internationalized Tribunals: A Search for Their Legal Bases19. The Road to Kandahar: British Military Interventions and International Law20. Non Consensual Aerial Surveillance in the Airspace over the Exclusive Economic Zone for Military and Defence Purposes