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Volume 60, Issue 1

Mar 8, 2019 | Content, News, Print Archives, Print Archives

Table of Contents

Masthead

 

Articles

Do Alternative Justice Mechanisms Deserve Recognition in International Criminal Law?: Truth Commissions, Amnesties, and Complementarity at the International Criminal Court

By: Martha Minow

 

Precedent and Dialogue in Investment Treaty Arbitration

By: Richard C. Chen

 

Tides of Climate Change: Protecting the Natural Wealth Rights of Disappearing States

By: Ori Sharon

 

Hiding in Plain Sight: The Power of Public Governance in International Arbitration

By: C.J.W. Baaij

 

Note

Conceptualizing the Relationship between International Human Rights Law and Private International Law

By: Mark Hirschboeck

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NEW in Perspectives: Amid debate over the design of an #ASEAN human rights court, @rafsi_azzam23 explores whether such a court is necessary or possible in the first place. Link in bio! NEW: In the first contribution for our collaboration with the Harvard International Arbitration Law Students Association, Csongor István Nagy explores how investment arbitration under the Russia-Ukraine BIT could facilitate the use of frozen Russian assets to compensate Ukrainians for property destroyed during Russia's invasion. Link in bio! NEW in Perspectives: Andreas Chorakis examines the potential impact of Putin’s ICC arrest warrant on the peacemaking process and the delivery of international justice in Ukraine. Link in bio! The new U.N. Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction treaty, adopted in June 2023, states that its parties shall be guided by the principle of the “common heritage of humankind.” The phrase has historically been controversial: it stands for the notion that certain resources which fall outside national jurisdiction should not be unilaterally exploited by individual states. NEW: Only four percent of people in low-income countries were fully vaccinated for COVID-19 by the end of 2021 - even though 10 billion COVID vaccines had been produced by that time. NEW: Calls are growing for an international tribunal to assess the crime of aggression in the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In a new contribution for HILJ Online, David Donat Cattin and Philippa Greer continue to make the case for a hybrid chamber at the ICC and explain how the Rome Statute could be amended to create such a mechanism. Link in bio! HILJ and the Harvard International Arbitration Law Students Association are seeking short-form submissions for a special online collaboration on international arbitration! Selected contributions will be featured in a special section of HILJ Online: Perspectives and cross-promoted by HIALSA. The top five contributions will also be featured in HIALSA’s inaugural International Arbitration Online Bulletin. NEW: How should international governance approach automated weapon systems? Read a new contribution by Philip Alexander in Perspectives. Link in bio. We’ve already accepted seven HILJ Online: Perspectives contributions since firing up in September and we’re looking for more! Our advice for prospective authors ⬆️

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The Harvard International Law Journal is the oldest and most-cited student-edited journal in international law. It is edited by J.D. and LLM students at Harvard Law School. Learn more.

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