Artikel (70)
Indonesia and the Philippines integrate international law into their constitutional systems to uphold global commitments, protect human rights, and strengthen the rule of law. This study examines how both countries regulate state sovereignty and position international obligations within the national...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 2 (2025); 119-134 | 2026
This study analyzes the recognition and protection of indigenous peoples’ territorial rights in Indonesia and Russia within the framework of international human rights law and identifies factors affecting their effectiveness. Using a normative legal method with conceptual and comparative approache...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 2 (2025); 135-148 | 2026
Economic globalization has heightened tensions between national sovereignty and international trade obligations. This study compares constitutional review mechanisms in Indonesia, Thailand, and India, representing civil law and common law systems. Using normative legal methods with statute and compa...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 2 (2025); 103-118 | 2026
Climate change has become a major driver of cross-border displacement, creating the phenomenon of climate refugees. Although the 1951 Refugee Convention does not explicitly recognize this category, the reality of climate-induced displacement demands legal and policy responses from states, including ...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 2 (2025); 93-102 | 2026
The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) is an international law principle that affirms the obligation of the international community to protect populations from genocide, crimes against humanity, and other mass atrocities. The Rohingya crisis in Myanmar highlights the persistent tension between R2P and ...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 2 (2025); 79-92 | 2026
The global climate crisis demands enforceable legal frameworks to hold high-emission corporations accountable. Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy and a major oil producer, remains hampered by fragmented laws, weak enforcement, and regulatory gaps. This paper compares Nigeria’s framework with Sout...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 1 (2025); 63-78 | 2026
The globalization of trade has elevated Islamic halal standards within the domain of international economic law. While halal certification is rooted in Sharia, World Trade Organization (WTO) law is governed by secular principles, including non-discrimination, Most-Favored Nation (MFN) treatment, and...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 47-62 | 2025
The intersection between trade and environmental issues has become an unavoidable reality in the contemporary global landscape. The WTO, as the foremost global trade body, integrates elements of sustainable development across several of its legal frameworks. This study seeks to explore the presence ...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 31-46 | 2025
Transnational environmental crimes are among the most complex and destructive forms of cross-border criminality, including wildlife trafficking, illegal trade of endangered species, transboundary pollution, and unlawful exploitation of natural resources by state and non-state actors. These offenses ...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 15-30 | 2025
Nationality deprivation has become a tool of political repression, undermining fundamental human rights and rendering individuals stateless. In the United Arab Emirates, the government increasingly uses nationality deprivation to silence political dissidents, raising concerns about compliance with i...
Lampung Journal of International Law (LaJIL); Vol 7 No 1 (2025): Issue In progress (January 2025); 1-14 | 2025