Sunday, May 5, 2024

Call for Papers: Legal Histories of Empire

A call for papers has been issued for the fourth conference on "Legal Histories of Empire," to take place July 10-12, 2025, at the University of Toronto. The theme is: "Empires in Touch." The call is here.

Call for Papers: Between crisification and legal resilience: Change and stability in EU external relations law

The Centre for the Law of EU External Relations (CLEER) and the Asser Institute have issued a call for papers for a conference on "Between crisification and legal resilience: Change and stability in EU external relations law," to take place October 11, 2024, in The Hague. The call is here.

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Lecture: Lijnzaad on "We're in this together, the scope of the 'ship-as-a-unit' rule"

On May 8, 2024, Liesbeth Lijnzaad (Judge, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea) will deliver a lecture (on Zoom) as part of the 2024 Public International Law Lecture Series. The topic is: "We're in this together, the scope of the 'ship-as-a-unit' rule." Details are here.

New Issue: Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies

The latest issue of the Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies (Vol. 15, no. 1, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Agnieszka Szpak, Ukraine and Violations of International Humanitarian Law – A Critical Analysis of the Amnesty International Report
  • David James Cantor, Conceptualising “Relocation” Across Displacement Contexts
  • Sara (S) Benabbass & Marten (M.C.) Zwanenburg, The Interaction Between the Obligation to Warn and Other Rules of ihl
  • Rebecca Barber, What Blocked the UN’s Response to the Earthquakes in Northwest Syria? Reflections on a Humanitarian System Premised on Government Consent
  • Mark Klamberg, Regulatory Choices at the Advent of Gig Warfare
  • Giacomo Biggio, The Legal Status and Targeting of Hacker Groups in the Russia-Ukraine Cyber Conflict

Friday, May 3, 2024

Provost: Legal Pluralism and War

René Provost (McGill Univ. - Law) has posted Legal Pluralism and War. Here's the abstract:
Wars are moments of social and political dislocation that uncover assumptions that routinely remain uninterrogated. The nature and function of law in society are questions both so complex and so pervasive that they most often fall into the category of unexamined facets of social life, relegated to the abstract musings of philosophers and legal theorists. Wars sometimes disrupt the normal patters of legalism to suddenly make more concrete and immediate such foundational questions. Thus, warzones are often thought of as lawless spaces, but in fact the problem is more often an overabundance of laws. Conflict situations in which several legal orders make competing claims are not extraordinary at all; arguably, it could be claimed that they are one of the defining legal features of war. The strange and tragic fate of Rainer Beck and Bruno Dörfer offers a striking illustration of the revealing disruption of law in war and the ways in which legal pluralism can help to structure thinking about the concept of law in such a context. Indeed, legal pluralism suggests that this and other examples of disrupted legality in conflict zones are best understood as the interaction and intersection of legal orders that must be mediated rather than resolved by claims of higher authority.

Hollis: Delimiting "Agreements" for International Law

Duncan B. Hollis (Temple Univ. - Law) has posted Delimiting "Agreements" for International Law (Virginia Journal of International Law Online, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
Agreements are central to many international law projects, including both treaty-making and the (rising) use of non-binding agreements. Yet, for all the attention States and scholars currently direct to differentiating between binding and non-binding agreements, there has been relatively little discussion of the antecedent inquiry – what constitutes an agreement in the first place? This short essay calls for new efforts to define agreements for purposes of international law and international relations, focusing on two criteria – mutuality and commitment. Agreements require two (or more) participants just as they must exhibit some shared expectations regarding those participants’ future behavior. This definition provides important limiting principles by excluding certain binding instruments (e.g., unilateral declarations) as well as some non-binding ones (e.g., diplomatic “deliverables” that do not reflect shared commitments to future courses of conduct). Moreover, a focus on agreements foregrounds a salient category absent in most existing discourse – tacit agreements. Reflecting on why tacit agreements qualify as agreements can help highlight different methods (e.g., content-driven criteria, presumptions and defaults) to supplement (or substitute for) existing subjective and objective efforts to identify whether an agreement is binding under international law. For those concerned with the transparency of diplomatic deliverables, the efficacy of domestic approval procedures for international agreements, as well as the operation of both the law of treaties and the law of state responsibility, it will be necessary to develop a broader and deeper understanding of what agreements “are” alongside any efforts to identify and differentiate among their binding and non-binding forms.

Hathaway & Khan: 'Mistakes' in War

Oona A. Hathaway (Yale Univ. - Law) & Azmat Khan (Columbia Univ. - Journalism) have posted 'Mistakes' in War (University of Pennsylvania Law Review, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:

In 2015, the United States military dropped a bomb on a hospital in Afghanistan run by Médecins Sans Frontières, killing forty-two staff and patients. Testifying afterwards before a Senate Committee, General John F. Campbell explained that “[t]he hospital was mistakenly struck.” In 2019, while providing air support to partner forces under attack by ISIS, the U.S. military killed dozens of women and children. Central Command concluded that any civilian deaths “were accidental.” In August 2021, during a rushed withdrawal from Afghanistan, the U.S. military executed a drone strike in Kabul that killed ten civilians, including an aid worker for a U.S. charity and seven children in his family. The Pentagon later admitted it was a “tragic mistake.” In these cases and others like them, no one set out to kill the civilians who died. Such events are usually chalked up as sad but inevitable consequences of war—as regrettable “mistakes.”

This Article examines the law on “mistakes” in war. It asks: Under international humanitarian law, intentionally killing a civilian is a war crime, but is killing a civilian by mistake ever a crime? It considers whether and when the law holds not just individuals, but also states, responsible for “mistakes.” To see how the law works, or fails to work, in practice, the Article examines the U.S. military’s own assessments of civilian casualties. The analysis focuses on the United States, both because of its global military operations and because of the power of its example to shape global practices. It demonstrates that “mistakes” in the U.S. counterterrorism campaign have been far more common than generally acknowledged. Moreover, some errors are the predictable result of a system that, during the period examined, did little to learn from its mistakes.

Call for Papers: 12th Conference of the Postgraduate and Early Professionals/Academics Network of SIEL

A call for papers has been issued for the 12th Conference of the Postgraduate and Early Professionals/Academics Network of the Society of International Economic Law, to be held July 3-4, 2024, in Hong Kong. The call is here.

Call for Papers: Small States and Arctic Sustainability Workshop

The Singapore Management University Yong Pung How School of Law has issued a call for papers for a workshop on "Small States and Arctic Sustainability," to take place November 20, 2024, in Singapore. The call is here.

Thursday, May 2, 2024

Shaffer: Package Treaties: Addressing the Negative Effects of Trade

Gregory Shaffer (Georgetown Univ. - Law) has posted Package Treaties: Addressing the Negative Effects of Trade. Here's the abstract:
This article examines the rationales for addressing sustainability and social inclusion in trade policy and the tradeoffs among imperfect institutional choices in doing so through “flanking policies.” It examines three types of negative spillovers or externalities implicated by trade: material, moral, and social/political. Part I defines terms and sets forth the argument. Part II typologizes the three categories of negative externalities and then highlights the challenges posed for flanking measures given the reciprocal nature of externalities. It respectively addresses environmental harms and labor and social inclusion concerns. Part III assesses different institutional choices for addressing negative externalities, dividing them between domestic measures targeted at protecting domestic concerns and international ones, such as package treaties. Part IV shows how the concept of a flanking measure can be flipped, so that environmental sustainability and social inclusion become the core and trade measures the flanking policies. Part V concludes.

Gilleri: Sex, Gender and International Human Rights Law: Contesting Binaries

Giovanna Gilleri
(Univ. of Trieste) has published Sex, Gender and International Human Rights Law: Contesting Binaries (Routledge 2024). Here's the abstract:

This book investigates the relationship between sex and gender under international human rights law, and how this influences the formation of individual subjects.

Combining feminist, queer, and psychoanalytical perspectives, the author scrutinises the sexed/gendered human rights discourse, starting from the assumptions underpinning interpretations of sex, gender, and the related notions of gender identity, sex characteristics, and sexual orientation. Human rights law has so far offered only a limited account of the diversity of sexed/ gendered subjectivities, being based on a series of simplistic assumptions. Namely, that there are only two sexes and two genders; sex is a natural fact and gender is a social construct; gender is the metonymic signifier for women; and gender power relations take the asymmetrical shape of male domination versus female oppression. Against these assumptions, dominative and subordinate postures interchangeably attach to femininities and masculinities, depending on the subjects’ roles, their positionalities, and the situational meanings of their acts. The limits of an approach to gender which is based on rigid binaries are evident in two case studies, on the UN human rights treaty bodies’ vocabulary on medically unnecessary interventions upon intersex children and on the European Court of Human Rights’ narrative on sadomasochism.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Conference: Recharacterising International Disputes: Exploring the Phenomenon of Multi-Fora Litigation

On June 12-13, 2024, Maastricht University's Faculty of Law will host a conference, in the hybrid format, on "Recharacterising International Disputes: Exploring the Phenomenon of Multi-Fora Litigation." Details, including registration, are here.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

deGuzman & López: Is International Criminal Law Feminist?

Margaret M. deGuzman (Temple Univ. - Law) & Rachel López (Drexel Univ. - Law) have posted Is International Criminal Law Feminist? (in The Oxford Handbook on Women and International Law, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:

The future of international criminal law as a feminist project at its essence turns on one central question: Does international criminal law advance feminist goals? To answer this question, this chapter charts the landscape of feminist critiques of international criminal law, identifying two schools of feminist thought. On one hand, there are those who believe in the enterprise of international criminal law as a method of advancing women’s rights and on the other, those who reject the enterprise believing that it undermines them.

To aid this analysis, the chapter applies a framework conceived by Robert Cover, and elaborated by Katherine Young, of redemptive and rejectionist approaches. Feminists who adopt a redemptive frame recognize the limitations of international criminal law, but ultimately see the enterprise as redeemable—that is, they believe that with the right reforms it can be a tool for advancing women’s rights. In contrast, those who adopt a rejectionist frame, believe the premises that undergird international criminal law are so fundamentally anti-woman, that the best course is to reject it wholesale and find another tool for advancing women’s rights. The goal of this chapter is to put these schools of thought in conversation and suggest ways that feminists can work together to support their core shared goal: the advancement of women’s equality.

New Issue: GlobaLex

The latest issue of GlobaLex (January/February 2024) includes:

Monday, April 29, 2024

New Issue: American Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the American Journal of International Law (Vol. 118, no. 2, April 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Article
    • Miles Jackson & Federica I. Paddeu, The Countermeasures of Others: When Can States Collaborate in the Taking of Countermeasures?
  • Current Developments
    • Kevin Baumert, The Continental Shelf Beyond 200 Nautical Miles: Announcement of the U.S. Outer Limits
    • Daniel Bodansky, Four Treaties in One: The Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Agreement
  • International Decisions
    • Christopher Ward, Question of the Delimitation of the Continental Shelf Between Nicaragua and Colombia Beyond 200 Nautical Miles from the Nicaraguan Coast (Nicaragua v. Colombia)
    • Philipp Janig, X v. OPEC. Judgment No. SV 1/2021 (SV 1/2021–23) ECLI:AT:VFGH:2022: SV1.2021 and Verfassungsgerichtshof (Constitutional Court of Austria)
  • Contemporary Practice of the United States Relating to International Law
    • The United States Urges the Seizure of Russian Frozen Assets
    • The United States Provides and Then Rescinds Sanctions Relief for Venezuela
    • The United States Condemns Enactment of Ugandan Anti-homosexuality Act and Imposes Measures in Response
    • Congress Extends Anti-bribery Laws to the Demand Side with Enactment of the Foreign Extortion Prevention Act
    • The United States Supports Israel’s Use of Force in Gaza
    • The United States and Partners Use Force Against the Houthis to Protect Freedom of Navigation in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden
  • Recent Books on International Law
    • Basa̧k Çali, Optimism in International Human Rights Law Scholarship
    • José E. Alvarez, reviewing Frontiers of Gender Equality: Transnational Legal Perspectives, edited by Rebecca J. Cook
    • Nora Stappert, reviewing Talking International Law: Legal Argumentation Outside the Courtroom, by Ian Johnstone & Steven Ratner
    • Astrid Iversen, reviewing Sovereign Debt Restructuring and the Law: The Holdout Creditor Problem in Argentina and Greece, by Sebastian Grund
    • Antoine Pécoud, reviewing IOM Unbound? Obligations and Accountability of the International Organization for Migration in an Era of Expansion, edited by Megan Bradley, Cathryn Costello, & Angela Sherwood

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Brunk & Hakimi: The Prohibition of Annexations and the Foundations of Modern International Law

Ingrid (Wuerth) Brunk (Vanderbilt Univ. - Law) & Monica Hakimi (Columbia Univ. - Law) have posted The Prohibition of Annexations and the Foundations of Modern International Law (American Journal of International Law, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:

The international legal norm that prohibits forcible annexations of territory is foundational to modern international law. It lies at the core of three projects that have been central to the enterprise. The first focuses on settling title to territory as the basis for establishing state authority. The second regulates the use of force across (settled) territorial borders. The third provides for the people within each state’s (settled) borders collectively to determine their own fates. The norm that prohibits forcible annexations is integral to each of these projects independently, and by tying them together, has had a transformative effect on the legal system as a whole.

However, this prohibition is also misunderstood, both as a matter of history and in its relationship to other contemporary international legal norms. Because it is intertwined with all three of the above projects, its origins cannot be traced to only one or the other. The common narrative that describes it as the inevitable outgrowth of regulating war is, therefore, misleading and incomplete. That narrative overlooks the role that formerly colonized states played in securing this norm while seeking to establish themselves as states, through decolonization and claims of self-determination. In modern doctrine, too, the prohibition of annexations is often subsumed into the general prohibition on the use of force, when in fact, its normative influence extends much more broadly.

As a result, the norm’s significance and position in modern international law are consistently overlooked. Analysts have also, by and large, failed to appreciate that it is now caught up in a broader contest over the future world order and at risk of erosion. As deeply flawed as the previous world order was, jettisoning this norm is a dangerous path forward. From Ukraine to Palestine, Israel, the Nagorno-Karabakh region, the Golan Heights, Western Sahara, and the Chagos Archipelago, states and nonstate actors alike care deeply about exercising power over territory, which has historically been a primary impetus of interstate war.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Call for Papers: Imagining New and Alternative Legal Internationalisms

A call for papers has been issued for a stream on "Imagining New and Alternative Legal Internationalisms," part of a conference on "Legal Imaginaries," organized by the Law, Literature and Humanities Association of Australasia. The conference will take place on December 16-18, 2024, and hosted by the University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law. Here's the call:
The international legal order, as we knew it, has changed. Since the early 2000s, we have witnessed significant international changes, including an escalating environmental emergency, the emergence of new ways to wage armed conflicts, the proliferation of new technologies to convey international influence and power, the decline of ‘old’ international powers and the rise of ‘new’ or ‘emerging’ ones, as well as increasingly overt ‘backlash’ against the international institutions and legal norms of the post-WWII international legal order. While it is common for international lawyers to read these events in a register of anxiety and pessimism, this stream seeks to strike a more curious and perhaps even hopeful tone by opening up a conversation about the new and alternative internationalisms that are emerging. In a world where the old is dying and a new hegemonic order has not yet been born, we ask, how can we understand, challenge and re-imagine international law anew? Convenors: Claerwen O'Hara (La Trobe University) and Valeria Vázquez Guevara (University of Hong Kong). For call and submission instructions, please visit the website.

Call for Papers: General principles in EU external relations law

The T.M.C. Asser Institute has issued a call for papers for a conference on "General Principles in EU External Relations Law," to be held December 6, 2024, at the T.M.C. Asser Institute in The Hague. The call is here.

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Workshop: Transnational Legal and Political Theory

On May 17-18, 2024, the Baldy Center for Law and Social Policy at the School of Law, University at Buffalo, will host a workshop on "Transnational Legal and Political Theory," in person and online. Details are here.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Yip: Reconceptualizing Norm Conflict in International Law

Ka Lok Yip (Hamad Bin Khalifa Univ.) has posted Reconceptualizing Norm Conflict in International Law (Asian Journal of International Law, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
This article re-conceptualizes norm conflict in international law by uncovering the experiential dimension of its definition and the intentional dimension of its resolution, which have been missing from the traditional accounts. The article locates the basis of recognizing norm conflict in the experienced sense of incompatibility between norms in view of their contexts rather than in the pre-designated constellation of norms with contrary or contradictory functions according to their texts. Concomitantly, it argues that the justification for using certain legal techniques to resolve norm conflicts lies in the intended relationship deducible only between those norms that share the same regulatory purpose, rather than between norms merely applying to the same factual situation. This re-conceptualization generates a new typology of norm conflicts in light of the norms’ end goals and the means they provide to achieve them: “Ends Conflict”, “Means Conflict” and “Unexperienced Conflict”, and suggests apposite ways to tackle them.

Monday, April 22, 2024

New Issue: La Comunità Internazionale

The latest issue of La Comunità Internazionale (Vol. 79, no. 1, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Articoli e Saggi
    • Giuseppe Puma, Le sanzioni economiche unilaterali contro la Bielorussia nella recente prassi internazionale
    • Fiammetta Borgia, Intelligenza artificiale, arte digitale e diritto d’autore: profili di diritto internazionale
    • Laura Di Gianfrancesco, La funzione di accountability dell’Assemblea generale delle Nazioni Unite alla luce della risoluzione 76/262 sulla veto initiative
    • Francesco Gaudiosi, One Health: A New Intersectoral Approach and its Legal Implications for Global Health Governance
  • Osservatorio Diritti Umani
    • Giorgia Bevilacqua, Innovazione tecnologica e interpretazione del diritto al gioco nella Convenzione ONU sui diritti del fanciullo
    • Federica Falconi, Contrasto allo hate speech e responsabilità nella comunicazione politica online: note alla sentenza della Corte europea dei diritti umani Sanchez c. Francia
  • Osservatorio Europeo
    • Francesco Viggiani, La posizione asimmetrica della Corte di giustizia dell’Unione europea nel contesto “emergenziale” del fenomeno migratorio

Peat: Positivism and the Cognitive Turn

Daniel Peat (Leiden Univ. - Law) has posted Positivism and the Cognitive Turn (in International Legal Theory and the Cognitive Turn, A. van Aaken & M. Hirsch eds., forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
Of all the strands of international legal theory that exist in contemporary international law scholarship, one might have thought that the cognitive turn would impact positivism the most. In this chapter, however, I want to paint a different picture. The caricature of positivism that many of us hold in our heads – as a theory that is formalist, voluntarist, state-centric, and detached from morals – no longer accords with the prevalent conception of the theory in much of the literature. Instead, I argue that the principal challenge to positivism comes from experimental jurisprudence, a nascent body of literature which shows that the general public fails to recognise a source-based concept of law. This challenges positivists to explain why their view is to be preferred to the so-called ‘folk’ concept of law.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Monebhurrun, Olarte-Bácares, & Velásquez-Ruiz: International Investment Law and Arbitration from a Latin American Perspective

Nitish Monebhurrun
(Univ. Center of Brasilia), Carolina Olarte-Bácares (Pontificia Universidad Javeriana), & Marco A. Velásquez-Ruiz (Pontificia Universidad Javeriana) have published International Investment Law and Arbitration from a Latin American Perspective (Springer 2024). The table of contents is here. Here's the abstract:
The book brings to light how Latin American States have traditionally stood before the field of International Investment Law and Arbitration. It delves into their posture of resistance to critically examine how their perspective has gradually changed and how they have adapted their investment agreements so as not to leave their position as players in the field of International Investment Law.

Rudall: Responsibility for Environmental Damage

Jason Rudall
(Leiden Univ. - Law) has published Responsibility for Environmental Damage (Edward Elgar Publishing 2024). Here's the abstract:

Engaging with one of the most consequential issues of our time, this book provides a thoughtful analysis of responsibility for environmental damage under international law. It conceives of responsibility in a comprehensive way, tackling the legal responsibility, liability and accountability of state and non-state actors for harm they cause to the environment.

Responsibility for Environmental Damage traverses the primary and secondary rules of international law, the responsibility, liability and accountability of states, international organizations, corporations and individuals, as well as existing, new and emerging regulatory frameworks. It engages with the consequences of environmental harm, appraising both orthodox legal doctrines and cutting-edge questions like shared responsibility, equitable considerations, full reparation, response measures under liability regimes, corporate responsibility, ecocide and responsibility for climate change, amongst many others. In doing so, the book evaluates whether the law is equipped to deal with the novel challenges that environmental damage presents and argues that new legal tools are needed to effectively tackle some of the most significant threats to our planet.

Saturday, April 20, 2024

New Issue: World Trade Review

The latest issue of the World Trade Review (Vol. 23, no. 2, May 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Jonas Kasteng, Ari Kokko, Nils Norell, & Patrik Tingvall, Learning to Use Trade Preferences: A Firm and Transaction Level Analysis of the EU–South Korea FTA
  • Usama Salamat & Salamat Ali, The Long Shadows of Brexit: Implications for African Countries
  • Anatole Boute, Accounting for Carbon Pricing in Third Countries Under the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism
  • Mira Burri, María Vásquez Callo-Müller, & Kholofelo Kugler, The Evolution of Digital Trade Law: Insights from TAPED
  • Emily Jones, Beatriz Kira, & Rutendo Tavengerwei, Norm Entrepreneurship in Digital Trade: The Singapore-led Wave of Digital Trade Agreements
  • Bryan Mercurio, The Demise of Globalization and Rise of Industrial Policy: Caveat Emptor
  • Thibault Denamiel, Response to Bryan Mercurio's Caveat Emptor
  • Tim Groser, Small State Diplomacy in Action: The Real Origins of TPP