Saturday, March 24, 2012

2012 ASIL Certificates of Merit for Scholarship

The American Society of International Law has announced its 2012 Certificates of Merit for Scholarship. They are:

Certificate of Merit - Preeminent Contribution to Creative Scholarship: Nico Krisch, Beyond Constitutionalism: The Pluralist Structure of Postnational Law (Oxford Univ. Press 2010)

Certificate of Merit - High Technical Craftsmanship and Utility to Practicing Lawyers and Scholars: David L. Sloss, Michael D. Ramsey, & William S. Dodge, International Law in the U.S. Supreme Court: Continuity and Change (Cambridge Univ. Press 2011)

Certificate of Merit - Specialized Area of International Law: Sundhya Pahuja, Decolonizing International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality (Cambridge Univ. Press 2011)

Honorable Mention - Specialized Field of International Law: Ruti Teitel, Humanity's Law (Oxford Univ. Press 2011)

New Issue: Human Rights & International Legal Discourse

The latest issue of Human Rights & International Legal Discourse (Vol. 5, no. 2, 2011) is out. Contents include:
  • D. Vanheule, Foreword: Human Rights and Immigration in Europe – A Bridge over Troubled Water?
  • A. Wiesbrock, The Right to Family Reunification of Third-Country Nationals under EU Law – Is Directive 2003/86/EC in Compliance with the ECHR?
  • V. Moreno-Lax, Beyond Saadi v UK: Why the ‘Unnecessary’ Detention of Asylum Seekers is Inadmissible under EU Law
  • J. Chevalier-Watts, Military Operations and the Right to Life: The Uneasy Bedfellows
  • N. McMurry, Water Privatisation: Diminished Accountability
  • J. Krommendijk, The Impact and effectiveness of Non-Judicial Mechanisms for the Implementation of Human Rights

Friday, March 23, 2012

New Issue: European Journal of International Law

The latest issue of the European Journal of International Law (Vol. 23, no. 1, February 2012) is out. Contents include:
  • Editorial
    • JHHW, Integration Through Fear
  • Articles
    • Armin von Bogdandy & Ingo Venzke, In Whose Name? An Investigation of International Courts’ Public Authority and Its Democratic Justification
    • Marlies Glasius, Do International Criminal Courts Require Democratic Legitimacy?
    • Nicolás Carrillo-Santarelli & Carlos Espósito, The Protection of Humanitarian Legal Goods by National Judges
    • David Koller, … and New York and The Hague and Tokyo and Geneva and Nuremberg and …: The Geographies of International Law
  • Critical Review of International Jurisprudence
    • Marko Milanovic, Al-Skeini and Al-Jedda in Strasbourg
    • Matthew Parish, International Courts and the European Legal Order
    • Agnieszka Szpak, National, Ethnic, Racial, and Religious Groups Protected against Genocide in the Jurisprudence of the ad hoc International Criminal Tribunals
  • Roaming Charges
    • Moments of Dignity: Bicycle Repair Man, Peking
  • EJIL: Debate!
    • Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: Clarifying a Widespread Misunderstanding
    • Eyal Benvenisti, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: A Reply to Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda
    • Jose Alejandro Carballo Leyda, The Laws of Occupation and Commercial Law Reform in Occupied Territories: A Rejoinder to Eyal Benvenisti
  • The European Tradition in International Law: Nicolas Politis
    • Linos-Alexander Sicilianos & Thomas Skouteris, Editorial Note
    • Marilena Papadaki, The ‘Government Intellectuals’: Nicolas Politis – An Intellectual Portrait
    • Robert Kolb, Politis and Sociological Jurisprudence of Inter-War International Law
    • Umut Özsu, Politis and the Limits of Legal Form
    • Nicholas Tsagourias, Nicolas Politis’ Initiatives to Outlaw War and Define Aggression, and the Narrative of Progress in International Law
    • Maria Gavouneli, Neutrality – A Survivor?

Vermeulen: Enforced Disappearance: Determining State Responsibility under the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance

Marthe Lot Vermeulen has published Enforced Disappearance: Determining State Responsibility under the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (Intersentia 2012). Here's the abstract:

In late 2010, the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (ICPPED) entered into force. The present study addresses the question of determining state responsibility under the ICPPED, based on a framework that harmonises the protection afforded by this convention with the experiences of victims of enforced disappearance. The premise is that such an approach enhances the protection from this grave human rights violation.

The book consists of two parts. The first part sets the parameters for the evaluative framework. This part examines the norms laid down in the ICPPED and identifies room for interpretation. The first part also examines the effects of an enforced disappearance on its victims and discerns the main causes of their suffering. Lastly, this part examines the state obligations that give effect to the protection from enforced disappearance. This framework provides the basis for the comparative case law analysis in the second part of the book. The second part primarily scrutinises the case law of the Human Rights Committee, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights. It compares the case law on the various state obligations that are relevant to the interpretation and application of the ICPPED. Subsequently, this part evaluates the case law and provides, where necessary, alternative approaches in light of the identified main causes of victims’ suffering.

This study concludes with recommendations for the interpretation and application of the norms laid down in the ICPPED by its supervisory committee. Although primarily directed towards the ICPPED, the study addresses general issues concerned with the protection from enforced disappearance. Thereby, it is hoped that the book is of value to a wide range of human rights bodies and experts dealing with this human rights violation.

Burgorgue-Larsen et al.: Les interactions normatives - Droit de l'Union européenne et droit international

Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen, Edouard Dubout, Alexandre Maitrot de la Motte, & Sébastien Touzé have published Les interactions normatives - Droit de l'Union européenne et droit international (Pedone 2012). The table of contents is here. Here's the abstract:
Les rapports entre le droit de l'Union européenne et le droit international requièrent une attention permanente. C'est que leur nature continue d'être indécise. Entre émancipation contestée et fertilisation croisée, se dessine une relation particulière entre les deux ordres juridiques qui se nourrit de rebondissements et de développements constants. Plus particulièrement les interactions entre les normes issues des ordres juridiques de l'Union européenne et international méritent d'être observées attentivement. D'une part et de manière générale, le principe même d'une distinction entre ces deux types de normes continue de soulever certaines difficultés. Les raisonnements et catégories juridiques peinent à rendre compte de ce phénomène. Si la singularisation des normes européennes par rapport aux normes internationales semble de plus en plus fréquemment reconnue, leur positionnement respectif est loin d'être clairement identifié que ce soit sous un angle vertical (conciliation de normes contraires) ou horizontal (combinaison de normes convergentes). D'autre part et de façon particulière, la fréquence des interactions entre normes du droit de l'Union européenne et du droit international s'intensifie au fur et à mesure que l'Union européenne étend ses compétences : si le champ économique reste un domaine d'interaction privilégié, ceux relatifs à la régulation sociale et environnementale, et au statut ou à la protection des personnes, en constituent désormais des illustrations nouvelles. La question est de savoir comment les spécificités des problématiques en cause peuvent influencer le contenu des interactions normatives et la manière de les concevoir. Cette étude collective des rapports normatifs est déclinée sous une pluralité d'angles différents, soit rationae personae selon la situation de celui qui porte un regard sur la relation qu'entretiennent ces deux types de normes (1ère Partie), soit rationae materiae selon le domaine substantiel envisagé dans lequel l'inter-action des normes a lieu (2ème Partie).

Baban: La mise en œuvre de la responsabilité pénale du chef d'État

Bryar Baban has published La mise en œuvre de la responsabilité pénale du chef d'État (Larcier 2012). Here's the abstract:

Depuis le procès de Nuremberg, l’institution de la protection des chefs d’État et de gouvernement apparaît de plus en plus comme une forteresse menacée.

Cette institution repose sur des concepts traditionnels comme l’immunité historique des chefs d’État, l’égalité souveraine des États, le principe de non- intervention, la protection de la fonction représentative. À l’époque actuelle, en revanche, on assiste à l’apparition d’un courant doctrinal en faveur d’une liberté de poursuite, qui entre en concurrence avec l’institution de la protection des chefs d’État relative aux crimes internationaux.

Dès lors, exposer les moyens au service de cette liberté de poursuite apparaît nécessaire, afin de mieux appréhender la logique qui la sous-tend, et d’éclaircir par ailleurs les nombreuses zones d’ombre que recèle le statut des chefs d’État. Il importe ainsi de mesurer l’impact de leur statut sur la répression internationale en général, et sur leur poursuite en particulier. La revendication en faveur de cette liberté de poursuite s’accentue dans l’ordre juridique international. Elle se matérialise notamment par la création de tribunaux pénaux internationaux ou internationalisés, ainsi que de la Cour pénale internationale, tous étant chargés de lutter contre l’impunité, avec la participation des instances judiciaires nationales mobilisées pour réaliser cet objectif.

C’est la raison pour laquelle l’idée a été renversée pour se concentrer davantage sur l’incidence de la répression internationale sur le statut des chefs d’État. Si ce statut empêchait historiquement les poursuites à leur égard, la justice internationale cherche désormais à réduire son impact en développant des méthodes et des principes, qui soulèvent également de nombreuses questions.

Ohlin: Second-Order Linking Principles: Combining Vertical and Horizontal Modes of Liability

Jens David Ohlin (Cornell Univ. - Law) has posted Second-Order Linking Principles: Combining Vertical and Horizontal Modes of Liability (Leiden Journal of International Law, forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
Both the ICTY and the ICC have struggled to combine vertical and horizontal modes of liability. At the ICTY, the question has primarily arisen within the context of ‘leadership-level’ JCEs and how to express their relationship with the Relevant Physical Perpetrators of the crimes. The ICC addressed the is-sue by combining indirect perpetration with co-perpetration to form a new mode of liability known as indirect co-perpetration. The following article argues that these novel combinations — vertical and horizontal modes of liability — cannot be simply asserted; they must be defended at the level of criminal law theory. Unfortunately, courts that have applied indirect co-perpetration have generally failed to offer this defense and have simply assumed that modes of liability can be combined at will. In an attempt to offer the needed justification, this article starts with the premise that modes of liability are ‘linking principles’ that link defendants with particular actions, and that combining these underlying linking principles requires a second-order linking principle. The most plausible candidate is the personality principle — a basic principle that recognizes the inherently collective nature of leadership-level groups dedicated to committing international crimes. Like Roxin’s theories describing the collective organizations that can be used as a form of indirect perpetration, the personality principle treats the horizontal leadership group as an organization or group agent whose collective nature potentially justifies the attribution of vertical modes of liability to all members of the horizontal group. Although this article does not defend the doctrine of indirect co-perpetration, it does conclude that combined vertical and horizontal modes of liability, whether at the ICTY or ICC, implicitly or covertly rely on something like the personality principle in order to justify collective attribution to the horizontal collective.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

New Issue: Columbia Journal of Transnational Law

The latest issue of the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law (Vol. 50, no. 1, 2011) is out. Contents include:
  • Kyle Hatton & Katharina Pistor, Maximizing Autonomy in the Shadow of Great Powers: The Political Economy of Sovereign Wealth Funds
  • Noah Weisbord, Judging Aggression

Keitner: The Reargument Order in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum and Its Potential Implications for Transnational Human Rights Cases

Chimène I. Keitner (Univ. of California - Hastings College of the Law) has posted an ASIL Insight on The Reargument Order in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum and Its Potential Implications for Transnational Human Rights Cases.

New Issue: Journal of International Economic Law

The latest issue of the Journal of International Economic Law (Vol. 15, no. 1, March 2012) is out. Contents include:
  • Norbert Seiler & Jelena Madir, Fight Against Corruption: Sanctions Regimes of Multilateral Development Banks
  • Chi Manjiao, China’s Participation in WTO Dispute Settlement Over the Past Decade: Experiences and Impacts
  • Julien Chaisse, Promises and Pitfalls of the European Union Policy on Foreign Investment—How will the New EU Competence on FDI affect the Emerging Global Regime?
  • Jan Kleinheisterkamp, Investment Protection and EU Law: The Intra- and Extra-EU Dimension of the Energy Charter Treaty
  • Joshua Meltzer, Climate Change and Trade—The EU Aviation Directive and the WTO
  • Emily Barrett Lydgate, Biofuels, Sustainability, and Trade-Related Regulatory Chill
  • Marek Martyniszyn, Export Cartels: Is it Legal to Target your Neighbour? Analysis in Light of Recent Case Law
  • Caroline Henckels, Indirect Expropriation and the Right to Regulate: Revisiting Proportionality Analysis and the Standard of Review in Investor-State Arbitration
  • Ma Qian, ‘Reasonable Period of Time’ in the WTO Dispute Settlement System
  • Sangeeta Khorana & Sujitha Subramanian, Potential Accession to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement: A Case-Study on India

Fauchald & Nollkaemper: The Practice of International and National Courts and the (De-)Fragmentation of International Law

Ole Kristian Fauchald (Univ. of Oslo - Law) & André Nollkaemper (Univ. of Amsterdam - Law) have published The Practice of International and National Courts and the (De-)Fragmentation of International Law (Hart Publishing 2012). The table of contents is here. Here's the abstract:

In recent decades there has been a considerable growth in the activities of international tribunals and the establishment of new tribunals. Furthermore, supervisory bodies established to control compliance with treaty obligations have adopted decisions in an increasing number of cases. National courts further add to the practice of adjudication of claims based on international law.

While this increasing practice of courts and supervisory bodies strengthens the adjudicatory process in international law, it also poses challenges to the unity of international law. Most of these courts operate within their own special regime (functional, regional, or national) and will primarily interpret and apply international law within the framework of that particular regime. The role of domestic courts poses special challenges, as the powers of such courts to give effect to international law, as well as their actual practice in applying such law, largely will be determined by national law. At the same time, both international and national courts have recognised that they do not operate in isolation from the larger international legal system, and have found various ways to counteract the process of fragmentation that may result from their jurisdictional limitations.

This book explores how international and national courts can, and do, mitigate fragmentation of international law. It contains case studies from international regimes (including the WTO, the IMF, investment arbitration and the ECtHR) and from various national jurisdictions (including Japan, Norway, Switzerland and the UK), providing a basis for conclusions to be drawn in the final chapter.

Steingruber: Consent in International Arbitration

Andrea M. Steingruber has published Consent in International Arbitration (Oxford Univ. Press 2012). Here's the abstract:

Examining the notion, nature, and extent of consent in both commercial arbitration and investment arbitration, this book provides practitioners and academics with a thorough, case-related analysis of an issue which raises many questions.

Whilst considering the evolution of arbitration and its consensual nature - enlargement of the parties' freedom to consent to arbitration, and development from commercial arbitration to investment arbitration - it addresses important theoretical questions to offer practical solutions.

These include: how consent to arbitrate is expressed and when mutual consent to arbitration is reached; which law shall govern the arbitration agreement or, more particularly, consent as an element of the substantive validity of it; and, conversely, according to which law will a possible lack of consent be judged; how consent should be interpreted; which relationship exists between consent as part of the substantive validity of an arbitration agreement and its formal validity; which, if any, are the implied terms when consenting to arbitration; how consent to arbitrate influences procedural aspects (counterclaims, joinder, consolidation), and which solutions adopted by treaties, national laws or arbitration rules are, or would be, the most respectful of parties' consent in this respect; what in investment arbitration is the relationship between consent and most-favoured-nation clauses or the influence of umbrella clauses.

The book includes original arguments and puts forward new suggestions with regard to the changeable consensual character of arbitration. It also provides a particular focus on problems that frequently arise in practice of international arbitration, for example issues related to complex multiparty arbitration and to jurisdictional questions in investment arbitration.

Prost: The Concept of Unity in Public International Law

Mario Prost (Keele Univ. - Law) has published The Concept of Unity in Public International Law (Hart Publishing 2012). Here's the abstract:
'Fragmentation' has become a defining, albeit controversial, metaphor of international law scholarship in the era of globalisation. Some scholars see it as a new development, others as history repeating itself; some approach it as a technical issue and some as the reflection of deeper political struggles. But there is near-consensus about the fact that the established vision of international law as a unitary whole is under threat. At the core of the fragmentation debate lies the concept of unity, but this is hardly ever rationalised and is more assumed than explained. Its meaning remains vague and intuitive. 'The Concept of Unity in Public International Law' attempts to dispel that vagueness by exploring the various possible meanings of the concept of unity in international law. However, eschewing one grand theory of unity, it identifies and compares five candidates. Intentionally pluralistic in its outlook, the book does not engage in normative arguments about whether international law is or should be unitary but seeks to show instead that the concept of unity is contested and that discourses on fragmentation are necessarily contingent.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Talmon: A Primer on ICJ Procedure: A Commentary on Article 43 ICJ Statute

Stefan A.G. Talmon (Univ. of Bonn - Law) has posted A Primer on ICJ Procedure: A Commentary on Article 43 ICJ Statute. Here's the abstract:
The procedure before the International Court of Justice is governed, first and foremost, by Article 43 of the Court`s Statute, the Rules of Court, the Practice Directions and by the practice of the Court. The term ‘procedure’ describes the mode of conducting proceedings before the Court. In combining both oral and written phases of procedure the Court ‘marries the key features of the common and civil law systems’ thus allowing States, according to their own legal traditions, to lay greater emphasis on either of the two phases of the proceedings. The combination of the two phases is the basis for the sound administration of international justice. The Court’s procedure in contentious cases is characterized by the equality of the parties, the duality of the proceedings, the simplicity of the procedural rule and the flexibility in its application. The paper provides a detailed commentary on the rules governing the written and oral phase of the proceedings in contentious cases and the incidental proceedings on preliminary objections.

New Issue: Revue Québécoise de Droit International

The latest issue of the Revue Québécoise de Droit International (Vol. 23, no. 2, 2010) is out. Contents include:
  • Anne-Claire Gayet, La conformité des conditions de travail des travailleurs agricoles migrants au Québec avec l'article 46 de la Charte des droits et libertés de la personne interprété à la lumière du droit international
  • Maroine Bendaoud, Le droit au logement tel que vu par le Pacte international relatif aux droits économiques, sociaux et culturels : sa mise en œuvre québécoise est-elle conforme ?
  • Fannie Lafontaine, The Unbearable Lightness of International Obligations: When and How to Exercise Jurisdiction under Canada's Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes Act
  • Étienne Giroux, Bioprospection en Antarctique : juridiction des États et libre disposition des résultats
  • Sylvestre-José-Tidiane Manga, International Environmental Governance Reform within the United Nations: Seeking for more Sustainability Towards and Beyond Rio + 20 Earth Environment Summit

BIICL: The Special Procedures of the UN Human Rights Council and the Human Rights Situation in Iran

On March 26, 2012, Ahmed Shaheed (UN Special Rapporteur for Iran) and Scott Sheeran (Univ. of Essex - Law) will speak at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law on "The Special Procedures of the UN Human Rights Council and the Human Rights Situation in Iran."

Call for Papers: ESIL Interest Group on International Economic Law

The Interest Group on International Economic Law of the European Society of International Law has issued a call for papers for a workshop to be held on the occasion of the Society's Fifth Biennial Conference. Here's the call:

European Society of International Law Interest Group on International Economic Law

Workshop held on the occasion of the Fifth ESIL Conference on “Regionalism and International Law”

University of Valencia, 13-15 September 2012

Call for Papers

Deadline 23 April 2012

The IG on International Economic Law Interest Group invites all members of the ESIL to submit works for presentation in either of the two panels of our workshop: “The Regulatory Answers to the Sovereign Debt Crisis” and “The reach and impact of bilateralism as a tool for fragmentation or de-fragmentation in IEL”. The first panel will deal with the different legal instruments created both in the European Union and at the international level to solve the financial problems brought about by the sovereign debt crisis. On the second subject we will deal with fragmentation in a very wide sense, including trade, investment law, or even natural resources law. Proposals for papers may address either of the two topics. The deadline for the submission of abstracts is 23 April 2012. The ESIL IEL IG workshop takes place on Thursday 13 September 2012, 9:30-12:30 am.

In addition, there will be a joint workshop of the IG on International Economic Law and the IG on International Environmental Law on the topic of the United Nations ‘Rio+20’ Conference taking place on Wednesday, 12 September 2012, 6-8 pm.

For the full Call for Papers, please follow this link.

New Issue: Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The latest issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (Vol. 45, no. 1, January 2012) is out. Contents include:
  • Dan W. Puchniak & Masafumi Nakahigashi, Japan's Love for Derivative Actions: Irrational Behavior and Non-Economic Motives as Rational Explanations for Shareholder Litigation
  • Sheldon Bernard Lyke, Brown Abroad: An Empiricial Analysis of Foreign Judicial Citation and the Metaphor of Cosmopolitan Conversation
  • Philip M. Nichols, The Psychic Costs of Violating Corruption Laws

New Issue: Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights

The latest issue of the Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights (Vol. 30, no. 1, 2012) is out. Contents include:
  • S. E. Berry, A tale of two Instruments: Religious Minorities and The Council of Europe’s Rights Regime
  • E. Craig, From security to Justice? The Development of A More Justice-oriented Approach to the Realisation of european Minority Rights
  • F. Prina, Power, Politics and Participation: The Russian Federation’s National Minorities and their Participatory Rights

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Conference: Agents of Change: The Individual as a Participant in the Legal Process

On May 19-20, 2012, the Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law will host a conference on "Agents of Change: The Individual as a Participant in the Legal Process." The program is here.

New Issue: Revue de Droit International et de Droit Comparé

The latest issue of the Revue de Droit International et de Droit Comparé (Vol. 89, no. 1, 2012) is out. Contents include:
  • G. Caceres, L'aménagement raisonnable en matière religieuse: lorsque les concepts franchissent l'atlantique
  • R. Njeufack Temgwa, Le droit d'évocation de la Cour suprême camerounaise en matière civile en question: une contribution à l'évolution des cours suprêmes
  • L.D. Muka Tshibende, Y. Queinnec, & I. Tchotourian, Articles 224 et s. de la loi grenelle II: vers un droit de la gouvernance d'entreprise (enfin?) responsable
  • G. De Foestraets, Le contrôle de la contradiction des motifs d'une sentence arbitrale: vers une solution plus mesurée?

Call for Participation: Measuring the Immeasurable? The Fairness Discourse in Investment Treaty Arbitration

Daniel Behn, a PhD Candidate at the University of Dundee's Centre for Energy, Petroleum, and Mineral Law and Policy (CEPMLP), is conducting a study on the fairness discourse in investment treaty arbitration. This study is not a typical questionnaire; rather, it asks the participant to sort through a number of subjective statements (a process called Q sorting) on issues of fairness in investment treaty arbitration and to rank order them in relation to each other. The study seeks to improve our understanding on how values shape and influence the way that we approach legal problems in investment treaty arbitration. Participation should take about 20-30 minutes and will be conducted in the strictest of confidence. Those interested in participating should go to the study's website and use the access code "HLC."

Call for Papers: Collective Redress in the Cross-Border Context

A call for papers has been issued for a works-in-progress conference on "Collective Redress in the Cross-Border Context." Here's the call:

Collective Redress in the Cross-Border Context

Large-scale international legal injuries are becoming increasingly prevalent in today’s globalized economy, whether they arise in the context of consumer, commercial, contract, tort or securities law, and countries are struggling to find appropriate means of providing collective redress, particularly in the cross-border context. The Hague Institute for the Internationalisation of Law (HiiL), along with the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIAS), will be responding to this new and developing challenge by convening a two-day event on the theme “Collective Redress in the Cross-Border Context: Arbitration, Litigation, Settlement and Beyond.” The event includes two different elements – a workshop on 21-22 June 2012 comprised of invited speakers from all over the world as well as a works-in-progress conference on 20-21 June 2012 designed to allow practitioners and scholars who are interested in the area of collective redress to discuss their work and ideas in the company of other experts in the field. Both events are organized by the Henry G. Schermers Fellow for 2012, Professor S.I. Strong of the University of Missouri School of Law.

Persons interested in being considered as presenters for the works-in-progress conference should submit an abstract of no more than 500 words to Professor S.I. Strong at strongsi@missouri.edu on or before 1 May 2012. Decisions regarding accepted proposals will be made in early May, and those whose proposals are accepted for the works-in-progress conference will need to submit a draft paper by 4 June 2012 for discussion at the conference. All works-in-progress submissions should explore one or more of the various means of resolving collective injuries, including class and collective arbitration, mass arbitration and mass claims processes, class and collective litigation, and large-scale settlement and mediation, preferably in a cross-border context. Junior scholars in particular are encouraged to submit proposals for consideration.

Persons presenting at the works-in-progress conference will have to bear their own costs, since there is no funding available to assist with travel and other expenses. The works-in-progress conference will be held on 20 and 21 June 2012 at NIAS, Meijboomlaan 1, 2242 PR Wassenaar, The Netherlands. Wassenaar is approximately 20 minutes from The Hague by car. The workshop of invited speakers will be held on 21 and 22 June, also at NIAS.

Both the Schermers workshop and the works-in-progress conference are open to the public, although advance registration is required. More information on both events is available at the HiiL website (www.hiil.org) or from Professor Strong at strongsi@missouri.edu.

Contact: Prof. S.I. Strong at strongsi@missouri.edu

Deadline for proposals: 1 May 2012

For more on the Henry G. Schermers Fellowship at HiiL/NIAS, see: http://www.hiil.org/organ-bios/prof-s-i-strong

Mills: Towards a Public International Perspective on Private International Law: Variable Geometry and Peer Governance

Alex Mills (Univ. College London - Law) has posted Towards a Public International Perspective on Private International Law: Variable Geometry and Peer Governance. Here's the abstract:
This paper argues that private international law rules constitute a form of international ‘public’ ordering or global governance, and it explores some of the implications of this argument for the international development of private international law. It begins by examining the theoretical foundations for this perspective as well as its historical context and justification, arguing that it is more coherent and more consistent with pre-modern conceptions of the subject. It then turns to examine recent developments in federal systems – the European Union, Canada and Australia – which demonstrate the emergence of a similar ‘public’ perspective on private international law at a regional level. The paper then considers two major problems with the idea that developments within federal systems can be transplanted or applied by analogy at the international level, as well as the potential of two ideas which present responses to these problems. The first problem is that of hierarchy – the complexity of the relationship between federal and international developments – and the idea examined in response is that of variable geometry. The second problem is that of heterarchy – the absence of institutional structures comparable to those in federal systems to support international developments – and the idea of peer governance is examined as a response to this issue. The paper concludes that these ideas have a potentially important impact on a range of international law questions, and that they should form a key part of the research agenda for studies of global governance both within and beyond the context of private international law.

Talmon: The Absent Judge: A Commentary on Article 23 ICJ Statute

Stefan A.G. Talmon (Univ. of Bonn - Law) has posted The Absent Judge: A Commentary on Article 23 ICJ Statute. Here's the abstract:
The Members of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) are obliged to hold themselves permanently at the disposal of the Court except during judicial vacations and if they are on leave or prevented from attending by illness or other serious reasons. The Judges of the ICJ are, however, frequently absent from the Court. In several cases up to three members of the Court were absent at the same public sitting; in two cases, due to absence, the number of judges on the bench was reduced to 11; and in one recent case there were only 10 judges left on the bench. The paper examines provision of the Court’s Statute dealing with the absence of judges, the meaning of ‘absence’, the duty of judges to explain their absence, justifications for absence and the consequences of the absence of judges. Although the record of the judges’ presence in The Hague seems to have improved over last couple of years, their frequent presence at academic conferences, their public speaking engagements, and their work as arbitrators indicates some further room for improvement.

Stone Sweet & Brunell: How the European Legal System Works: Override, Non-Compliance, and Majoritarian Activism in International Regimes

Alec Stone Sweet (Yale Univ. - Law) & Thomas L. Brunell (Univ. of Texas, Dallas - Political Science) have posted How the European Legal System Works: Override, Non-Compliance, and Majoritarian Activism in International Regimes. Here's the abstract:
A striking feature of European integration and governance over the past fifty years has been the crucial role played by the European Court of Justice (ECJ). The ECJ is a Trustee court, rather than a simple Agent of the Member States, with the power to determine the scope of its own authority. In a recent paper, Carrubba et al., having examined the ECJ rulings on some 3,176 legal questions rendered over an 11-year period, claim that the decision-making of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has been constrained - systematically - by the threat of override on the part of Member State Governments, acting collectively, and the threat of non-compliance on the part of any single State. They also purport to have found strong evidence in favor of Intergovernmentalist, but not Neofunctionalist, integration theory. We undertake original analysis of the same data. We conclusively demonstrate that the threat of override is not credible, and that the legal system is activated, rather than paralyzed, by noncompliance. We also explore what happened when MSG sought to override the Court - they failed - and organize a contest between the rival theories. In a head-to-head showdown, Neofunctionalism wins in a landslide. Finally, the analysis provides statistical support for the view that the ECJ engages in majoritarian activism. When Member States urge the Court to censor a defendant State for noncompliance, the ECJ tends to do so. The conclusion draws out implications of our findings for research on the two other international regimes that exhibit effective judicial review: the World Trade Organization and the European Convention on Human Rights.

New Issue: Israel Law Review

The latest issue of the Israel Law Review (Vol. 45, no. 1, March 2012) is out. The second through seventh articles in this issue were presented at Fifth Annual Minerva Center for Human Rights–ICRC Conference on International Humanitarian Law, the topic of which was the principle of proportionality in the laws of war (both jus ad bellum and jus in bello). Contents include:
  • Frédéric Mégret, Is There Ever a ‘Right to One's Own Law’? An Exploration of Possible Rights Foundations for Legal Pluralism
  • Jann K Kleffner, Section IX of the ICRC Interpretive Guidance on Direct Participation in Hostilities: The End of Jus in Bello Proportionality as We Know It?
  • Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler & Shai Otzari, Do Soldiers' Lives Matter? A View from Proportionality
  • Robin Geiss, The Principle of Proportionality: ‘Force Protection’ as a Military Advantage
  • Christian J Tams & James G Devaney, Applying Necessity and Proportionality to Anti-Terrorist Self-Defence
  • Raphaël van Steenberghe, Proportionality under Jus ad Bellum and Jus in Bello: Clarifying their Relationship
  • Aaron Fellmeth, The Proportionality Principle in Operation: Methodological Limitations of Empirical Research and the Need for Transparency
  • Cedric Ryngaert, Apportioning Responsibility between the UN and Member States in UN Peace-Support Operations: An Inquiry into the Application of the ‘Effective Control’ Standard after Behrami

Call for Papers: Latin American Society of International Law 2012 Biennial Conference

The Latin American Society of International Law has issued a call for papers for its 2012 Biennial Conference. The theme is: "Latin America: Heritage and Inheritance in International Law." Here's the call (English/Spanish):

Latin American Society of International Law

Biennial Conference 2012

Latin America: Heritage and Inheritance in International Law

CALL FOR PAPERS

Rio de Janeiro Brazil 23-25 August 2012

Ever since their independence Latin American States have exercised significant influence on the progressive development of international law. Having arrived to international society during the first quarter of the nineteenth century these States were confronted with a largely unfavorable international legal system. This prompted an immediate concern among the newly independent States for the formulation of clear rules to protect their autonomy. In asserting these rights they provided solid bases for the transformation of international law. Remarkably the following century saw the generalization of these rules one after the other which today constitutes the body of international law.

During its Biennial Conference in 2012 the Latin American Society of International Law (LASIL) seeks to assess the development of international law taking Latin America as a focal point. The global situation of the past decade has prompted the revisionism of cosmopolitan and universalist tendencies and an increasing reliance on regional and national perspectives to address pressing issues. The global economic crisis the unprecedented growth of emerging countries and the insecurity derived from complex armed activities has favored inward-looking responses with far-reaching implications of a legal political and economic character. The Biennial Conference will evaluate these issues from a wider perspective while situating Latin America on the global stage.

The first objective of the Conference is to evaluate the region’s main contributions to the development of general international law overtime. The second consists in identifying legal responses to the new international challenges of our time.

I. Conference Format

The Program will consist of two parts: one plenary session and six discussion tables. Speakers at the discussion tables will be selected in accordance with the present Call. Participants and speakers may use any of the four LASIL languages (Spanish Portuguese English and French).

II. Eligibility of Speakers

This Call for Papers is open to academics and practitioners of all levels including PhD students. To ensure a rich discussion account will be taken of diverse perspectives and geographical representation.

Priority will be given to original presentations addressing a topic under the general conference theme.

III. Topics

1. International human rights tribunals and the Inter-American System

2. Migration: between national security and protection of the individual

3. Violence and armed conflict situations: differences and affinities

4. Dispute settlement and the Pact of Bogota

5. Developments in trade and investment: the environmental breakthrough

6. Cultural diversity in Latin America

IV. Selection

Proposals should be sent electronically to LASIL’s Board of Directors before 31 March 2012 through the following e-mail addresses: karina.perezrouco@graduateinstitute.ch and monica.naime@graduateinstitute.ch Proposals shall include the following:

a. Name of the discussion table in which they intend to participate

b. An abstract of 500 words of the proposed topic

c. Name of author(s) and institutional affiliation (if applicable)

d. CV of author(s) including a list of publications

e. Contact details of author(s) (including e&mail and phone number)

f. The language of the presentation

The LASIL Board of Directors will constitute a Committee responsible for the selection of proposals. The final decision regarding the inclusion of papers on the conference’s agenda will be notified to the participants not later than 30 April 2012. Finalized versions of the papers must be submitted by 31 July 2012. Only one proposal per person is allowed.

V. Conference Details

The conference will take place at Rio de Janeiro Brazil from 23 to 25 August 2012. No attendance fees are required.

LASIL is unfortunately currently unable to cover travel and accommodation expenses.

Monday, March 19, 2012

New Issue: Internationales Handelsrecht

The latest issue of Internationales Handelsrecht (2012, no. 1) is out. Contents include:
  • Peter Mankowski, Der Vorschlag für ein Gemeinsames Europäisches Kaufrecht

Safferling: International Criminal Procedure

Christoph Safferling (Philipps-Universität Marburg - Law) has published International Criminal Procedure (Oxford Univ. Press 2012). Here's the abstract:

This book sets out and analyses the procedural law applied by international criminal tribunals and the International Criminal Court (ICC). It traces the development of international criminal procedure from its roots in the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg to its current application by the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals, the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the Extraordinary Chamber in the Courts of Cambodia, and the International Criminal Court. All of these tribunals apply a different set of rules. The focus of this book, however, lies on the ICC and its procedural regime as contained in the Rome Statute, the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, and the different Regulations of the Court and of the Prosecutor.

The exceptional compromise between common and civil law which formed the basis of the ICC's Statute created a unique procedural order. This book systematically analyses the Court's organisational structure, overall procedural setting, and the individual procedural regulations, and compares and contrasts these to other international criminal tribunals. Amongst the many unresolved procedural issues are the rights of the accused before, during, and after the trial, the disclosure of evidence, the presentation of evidence, the participation of victims, the protection of witnesses, and the cooperation between the ICC and individual states. Through looking at these issues, the book develops a concise and fitting theoretical underpinning for the ICC's procedural order that is not founded on any specific legal culture.

ASIL Cables

The American Society of International Law has launched ASIL Cables, a website aimed to provide daily reports during the Society's upcoming Annual Meeting, which will take place March 28-March 31, in Washington, DC. Tai-Heng Cheng (New York Law School) will serve as ASIL Cables' editor. Here's his description of the idea:

For over a century, the American Society of International Law has convened scholars, policy-makers, and legal practitioners to exchange ideas about international law. Through its publications and meetings, the Society has brought its discussions to communities worldwide. In this fashion, the Society has deepened our understanding of international law and influenced solutions to global problems.

Internet technology has amplified the convening power of the Society. This 2012 edition of ASIL Cables is the Society’s inaugural effort to present online daily reports of discussions and events as they occur at the Annual Meeting. It connects, almost in real time, those of us at the meeting with those who cannot be present. For the Society’s members who are unable to attend the Meeting, and for readers who have not yet become members, ASIL Cables is a way to stay abreast of the latest ideas generated at the Meeting. It is also another arena for ASIL members to engage each other in conversations about the pressing issues of the day, either as contributors to ASIL Cables or by posting comments to the contributors’ dispatches.

Chasek & Wagner: The Roads from Rio: Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Multilateral Environmental Negotiations

Pamela Chasek (Manhattan College - Political Science) & Lynn M. Wagner (IISD Reporting Services) have published The Roads from Rio: Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Multilateral Environmental Negotiations (Routledge 2012). The table of contents is here. Here's the abstract:

At the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, popularly known as the Rio Earth Summit, the world’s leaders constructed a new "sustainable development" paradigm that promised to enhance environmentally sound economic and social development. Twenty years later, the proliferation of multilateral environmental agreements points to an unprecedented achievement, but is worth examining for its accomplishments and shortcomings.

This book provides a review of twenty years of multilateral environmental negotiations (1992-2012). The authors have participated in most of these negotiating processes and use their first-hand knowledge as writers for the International Institute for Sustainable Development’s Earth Negotiations Bulletin as they illustrate the changes that have taken place over the past twenty years. The chapters examine the proliferation of meetings, the changes in the actors and their roles (governments, nongovernmental organizations, secretariats), the interlinkages of issues, the impact of scientific advice, and the challenges of implementation across negotiating processes, including the Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Convention to Combat Desertification, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Commission on Sustainable Development, the UN Forum on Forests, the chemicals conventions (Stockholm, Basel and Rotterdam), the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, the Convention on Migratory Species and the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture.

Happold: Reviewing the Security Council: The Role of Other International Organisations

Matthew Happold (Université du Luxembourg - Law) has posted Reviewing the Security Council: The Role of Other International Organisations. Here's the abstract:

The recent activities of the Security Council of the United Nations with regards to Libya have highlighted once again how extensive its powers are. Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations, the Council has imposed an arms embargo, frozen Libyan assets, referred the situation to the International Criminal Court, ordered a ‘no-fly zone’ and authorized the use of force short of occupying the territory to enforce it and to protect the civilian population. But, of course, ‘For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required’ or, to put it in contemporary idiom, ‘With great power comes great responsibility.’ Although we might agree that the Security Council is justified in acting to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe, the powers it disposes can be used for both good and ill.

So what happens if and when the Council’s great powers are exercised irresponsibly? This paper examines two issues. The first is whether the Security Council is legibus solutus: that is, unbound by law. This examination, however, is only be preliminary to the second inquiry, which will consider which bodies are entitled to review the Security Council’s decisions to determine their vires and what, if they conclude that the Council has exceed its powers, they can do about it.

Given that today all but one or two provocateurs consider that the Council is not legally unbound, one might consider that absent some body external to the Security Council willing and able to act to scrutinize its actions to review their conformity with the Council’s legal powers, whether the Council will step outside of the limits of legality depends solely on the Council itself; a situation would render any legal limits to its powers illusory.

Debate, in this context, has tended to focus on judicial review; on whether the Council’s actions can be reviewed by some court or tribunal. At first, it was the role of the International Court of Justice that was scrutinised. More recently attention has shifted to look at other courts and tribunals, both national and international. However, as will be shown, judicial review of the Security Council’s actions cannot serve as a means to control the Council. The International Court of Justice will not, and other courts and tribunals cannot, effectively undertake such a task.

However, another option does exist: review by the United Nations member States themselves. It will be argued that the practice of States shows that there are limits to the power of the Security Council, and that States frame those limits in legal terms. States have asserted a ‘right of last resort’ to review the legality of Council decisions and to act accordingly. In particular, they have done so acting collectively through the political organs of international organisations.

Ford: How Special is the Special Court's Outreach Section?

Stuart Ford (The John Marshall Law School, Chicago) has posted How Special is the Special Court's Outreach Section? Here's the abstract:
This article attempts to evaluate the work of the Outreach Section of the Special Court for Sierra Leone. It begins with a brief history of the Outreach Section’s work. Then it discusses the methods and accomplishments of the Section, including its effect on outreach programs at other international criminal courts. Finally, I try to answer two questions: (1) how innovative was the Outreach Section?; and (2) has the Outreach Section been successful? In contrast to earlier commentators, I try to answer these questions using empirical data, including Sierra Leonean attitudes toward and knowledge about the court as measured in various surveys. I conclude that the Outreach Section has been modestly innovative, but that it has largely failed in its primary goal of educating Sierra Leoneans about the Special Court – while virtually all Sierra Leoneans are aware of the existence of the Special Court, very few have a good understanding of what it does.

Stone Sweet & Brunell: Trustee Courts and the Evolution of International Regimes: The Politics of Majoritarian Activism in the ECHR, the EU, and the WTO

Alec Stone Sweet (Yale Univ. - Law and Political Science) & Thomas L. Brunell (Univ. of Texas, Dallas - Political Science) have posted Trustee Courts and the Evolution of International Regimes: The Politics of Majoritarian Activism in the ECHR, the EU, and the WTO. Here's the abstract:
The paper focuses on the sources and consequences of judicial power in three international regimes: the European Union, the European Convention on Human Rights, and the World Trade Organization. The courts of these regimes are trustee courts, operating in an environment of judicial supremacy with respect to states. After elaborating a theory of trusteeship, we show that state non-compliance activates, rather than paralyzes, these courts; that the threat of override is not credible and thus cannot constrain judicial lawmaking; and that courts have used their trusteeship status to enhance the effectiveness of their respective legal systems. In each regime, we examined how judges have adjudicated their most politically controversial set of cases, those involving state claims to exemptions from treaty obligations for measures that are “necessary” to achieve a specified public interest. Although there is variation among cases, we find that each court has engaged in a strategy of “majoritarian activism,” producing law that reflects a high degree of state consensus but which would not be adopted by states under unanimity decision-rules. Majoritarian activism helps these courts develop the law in a progressive manner, to mitigate potential legitimacy problems, and to render efforts at curbing the growth of their authority improbable or ineffective.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Peyró Llopis: Force, ONU et organisations régionales : Répartition des responsabilités en matière coercitive

Ana Peyró Llopis (l’Université de Cergy-Pontoise) has published Force, ONU et organisations régionales : Répartition des responsabilités en matière coercitive (Bruylant 2012). Here's the abstract:

Le rôle dévolu aux organisations régionales en matière coercitive est mal défini. Les notions de « coercition » et d’« organisation régionale » sont incertaines, mais aussi les relations de ces organisations régionales avec le système de sécurité collective instauré par la Charte des Nations Unies. Dans cet ouvrage, il est défendu qu’en matière coercitive, les organisations régionales entretiennent avec l’Organisation des Nations Unies (ONU) des rapports régis notamment par le principe de subsidiarité. Si les contours de ce principe ne sont pas clairement définis, il risque cependant d’aboutir à de véritables substitutions des organisations régionales à l’ONU.

L’ouvrage réexamine les relations entre l’ONU et les organisations régionales au regard de leur pratique de la coercition. Celle-ci met en lumière l’existence de deux courants au sein du système de sécurité collective qui se complètent et se confrontent. Ainsi, le domaine de la coercition subit-il sa déconcentration et, parallèlement, sa décentralisation. En effet, alors que l’ONU délègue souvent aux organisations régionales l’exécution de la réaction à une menace contre la paix et la sécurité internationales, d’autres fois, les organisations régionales exercent des compétences qui leur sont propres. La déconcentration de la coercition suppose ainsi le maintien d’un seul niveau de compétence et d’une hiérarchie, au sommet de laquelle se trouve l’ONU.

La décentralisation implique, pour sa part, l’existence d’une multiplicité de sujets compétents dans le domaine de la coercition dont notamment les organisations régionales.