Since 2013, the Center for International and Comparative Law has been publishing the Armenian Yearbook of International and Comparative Law, which focuses on a wide range of international and comparative law topics.
The yearbook publishes articles, editorial comments, sections dedicated to the legal analysis and research of the practice of international law in the region, for which various scientific methods are used. The book also has innovative conclusions and recommendations.
One of the goals of the yearbook is to discuss the scope of legal issues from the perspective of the Caucasus, to develop academic research and literature in the field of law, and to set strict requirements for the quality of printing.
The editors of the yearbook are international and renowned experts in international and comparative law.
The first Yearbook of the Center for International and Comparative Law was published in 2013. Yeghishe Kirkosyan, co-founder of the Center, is the editor-in-chief.
It consists of three sections: "Articles", "Armenian Practice of International Law" and "Judicial Cases".
The articles section of the yearbook includes the articles of Armenian lawyers on current issues of international law and comparative law. The section on the Armenian practice of international law deals with the legal aspects of Armenia-EU relations and some problems related to Turkey and Azerbaijan. And in the section of judicial cases, the decision of the European Court of Human Rights, Bayatyan v. Armenia, and the decision of the French Constitutional Court regarding the bill to criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide is presented.
The main goal of the Yearbook is the correct presentation of individual issues related to the Armenian reality from a legal point of view.
In addition to other experts, the editorial team of the book includes the co-founders of the Center Siranush Sahakyan, Aram Orbelyan, Levon Gevorgyan, Taron Simonyan.