Thursday, June 6, 2013

Symposium: Emerging Issues in International Humanitarian Law

The current issue of the Santa Clara Journal of International Law (Vol. 11, no. 1, 2012) contains a symposium on "Emerging Issues in International Humanitarian Law." Contents include:
  • Louise Doswald-Beck, Unexpected Challenges: The Increasingly Evident Disadvantage of Considering International Humanitarian Law in Isolation
  • Richard J. Wilson, Omar Khadr: Domestic and International Litigation Strategies for a Child in Armed Conflict Held at Guantanamo
  • Kate Jastram, The Kids Before Khadr: Haitian Refugee Children on Guantanamo [A Comment on Richard J. Wilson's Omar Khadr: Domestic and International Litigation Strategies for a Child in Armed Conflict Held at Guantanamo]
  • Geoffrey S. Corn & Peter A. Chickris, Unprivileged Belligerents, Preventive Detention, and Fundamental Fairness: Rethinking the Review Tribunal Representation Model
  • Kristine A. Huskey, A Strategic Imperative: Legal Representation of Unprivileged Enemy Belligerents in Status Determination Proceedings
  • Deborah Pearlstein, The Law of the Possible in Armed Confilct: A Comment on Unprivileged Belligerents, Preventive Detention, and Fundamental Fairness
  • Dina Francesca Haynes, Naomi Cahn, & Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Women in the Post-Conflict Process: Reviewing the Impact of Recent U.N. Actions in Achieving Gender Centrality
  • Abraham D. Sofaer, "Mainstreaming" Women through U.N. Security Council Resolutions: Comments on a Paper by Haynes, Cahn, & Aoláin
  • Johann Bond, Victimization, Mainstreaming, and the Complexity of Gender in Armed Conflict