I. South Africa and the International Criminal Court
- Ambassador David Scheffer, How to Move Beyond South Africa’s Notice of Withdrawal from the ICC (Monday, Oct. 24)
II. Drones
- Shaheed Fatima Q.C., UK Government’s Disappointing Dodge on Drones (Friday, Oct. 28)
III. UN Peacekeeping and Haiti
- Ryan Goodman and Kate Brannen, How We Read a NYT Story on UN Responsibility for Peacekeepers’ Misconduct (Tuesday, Oct. 25)
IV. The Law of Armed Conflict: Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Relief Operations, Hospitals, Autonomous Weapons
- Kurt Sanger, Letter to the Editor: The Best Way to Protect Hospitals in Wartime—Enforce Existing Law (Monday, Oct. 24)
- Ryan Goodman and Alex Whiting, Who is Responsible for the Yemen Funeral Bombing, and How (Wednesday, Oct. 26)
- Jan Hessbruegge, The Right to Life as the Jus ad Bellum of Non-International Armed Conflict (A Reply to Lieblich) (Thursday, Oct. 27)
- Just Security, Full Text: “Oxford Guidance on Law of Relief Operations During Armed Conflict” (Thursday, Oct. 27)
- Chris Ford, Technology and Autonomy in Warfare: A Consideration of the Issue by the US Defense Science Review Board (Friday, Oct. 28)
V. Detention and ISIL
- Kate Brannen, Beyond Gitmo: What is the US Going to Do About the Coming Wave of ISIL Detainees? (Saturday, Oct. 29)
VI. Civil Liberties and the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act
- Rachel Meeropol and Lauren Gazzola, Is Throwing a Rock Through a Window “Terrorism”? Some Federal Prosecutors Think So (Wednesday, Oct. 126)
VII. Conflict Classification: What is an “International Armed Conflict” and its Implications
- Kenneth Watkin, Letter to the Editor: “Lines in the Sand”—A Reply to Professor Haque (Monday, Oct. 24)
- Jonathan Horowitz, Untangling the Web of Actors in Syria and Additional Complexities of Classifying Armed Conflicts (Tuesday, Oct. 25)
- Adil Ahmad Haque, Shots Fired: A Reply to Gill and Watkin (Tuesday, Oct. 25)