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Articles 1 - 30 of 536
Full-Text Articles in Law
Maritime Incidents In The South China Sea: Measures Of Law Enforcement Or Use Of Force?, Aurel Sari
Maritime Incidents In The South China Sea: Measures Of Law Enforcement Or Use Of Force?, Aurel Sari
International Law Studies
China has sought to extend its control over the South China Sea at the expense of neighboring countries. In pursuing its goals, Beijing adopts a “power and law” approach, claiming extensive territorial and maritime rights in contravention of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and asserting these rights through coercive action in disputed waters. A key element of China’s strategy involves the use of coast guard and maritime militia vessels in an effort to portray its operations as measures of law enforcement, rather than displays of coercive power.
This article argues that the Chinese narrative of law …
Review Of Dialogue & Dissent: A Constitution In Search Of A Country Kenya, Robert M. Press
Review Of Dialogue & Dissent: A Constitution In Search Of A Country Kenya, Robert M. Press
The Journal of Social Encounters
No abstract provided.
Enforcement Of International Investment Arbitration Awards: Comparative Lessons From Indonesia And China, Luo Yuan Yuan, Abdul Gani Abdullah Prof., Gatot Sumartono
Enforcement Of International Investment Arbitration Awards: Comparative Lessons From Indonesia And China, Luo Yuan Yuan, Abdul Gani Abdullah Prof., Gatot Sumartono
Indonesia Law Review
The current world has various methods to resolute the investment dispute, while the main reason which should be largely taken into account when people choose the way to resolve the dispute is whether the recognition and enforcement of the resolution is effective or not.
As the most popular resolution chosen for investment dispute, the international arbitration is playing the most crucial role on the current stage. The article focuses on the comparative study on the recognition and enforcement of International Investment Arbitration Award between Indonesia and China. The research addresses two questions namely: (1) how to make the dispute settlement …
Does Black-Letter Law Matter In Labor Rights Protection In China? - A Tale Of Two Cities, Peter Chi Hin Chan
Does Black-Letter Law Matter In Labor Rights Protection In China? - A Tale Of Two Cities, Peter Chi Hin Chan
Washington International Law Journal
This article discusses the role of black-letter law in labor protection in China in cases where employers dismiss employees on the grounds of serious breaches of internal regulations. This article presents an empirical analysis of the judicial practice of two of China’s economically developed cities, Suzhou and Wuxi. Suzhou employers have to give employees the opportunity to be heard prior to dismissal, while Wuxi does not provide that opportunity. First, this article introduces the Chinese labor legislation system, the dismissal system, and the two cities’ local labor regulations. Second, the article will analyze and discuss 140 cases from Suzhou and …
Regulating Digital Platforms Through Sanctions, Michelle Miao
Regulating Digital Platforms Through Sanctions, Michelle Miao
Washington International Law Journal
This article, theoretically and empirically, articulates the rising role of criminal law as a regulatory tool of China’s digital platform economy. This unique Chinese model of digital platform governance is described as “regulation through sanctions.” Through a comprehensive survey of a wide range of digital platforms— e.g., financial fundraising platforms, e-commerce, taxi-hailing, and video-sharing platforms—and criminal cases involving such platforms, I reveal the logic of regulation through sanctions: It shifts state regulatory burden and accountability, redistributes risks and responsibility, and enhances political legitimacy. Compared to the direct regulatory model adopted by European countries and indirect, self-regulatory model employed in the …
Narrowing “The Gap”: Counter Gray Zone Operations, Raul (Pete) Pedrozo
Narrowing “The Gap”: Counter Gray Zone Operations, Raul (Pete) Pedrozo
International Law Studies
China is exploiting "The Gap" by conducting provocative Gray Zone operations to challenge its neighbors' sovereignty and sovereign rights, as well as their navigational rights and freedoms, in waters off their coast in the East China Sea, Taiwan Strait, and South China Sea. By engaging in malign activities that fall below the threshold of an "armed attack," China anticipates it can incrementally advance its interests without eliciting a military response from the targeted States. Diplomatic protests and third-party dispute settlement have not convinced China to halt its aggressive behavior. This article suggests States should use non-lethal counter-piracy tactics, techniques, and …
Religious Courts And Tribunals In Africa: An Overview, Mark Hill Kc
Religious Courts And Tribunals In Africa: An Overview, Mark Hill Kc
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Volume 14, Issue 3 - Full Issue, Notre Dame Journal Of Int'l & Comparative Law Volume 14
Volume 14, Issue 3 - Full Issue, Notre Dame Journal Of Int'l & Comparative Law Volume 14
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Letter From The Editor, Barrett Cole
Letter From The Editor, Barrett Cole
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Deep Seabed Mining: What Is To Be Done About The Regulatory Lacuna?, Katherine Reece Thomas
Deep Seabed Mining: What Is To Be Done About The Regulatory Lacuna?, Katherine Reece Thomas
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Getting In A Bind—Comparing Executive Compensation Regulations In The U.S. And The U.K., Bobby V. Reddy
Getting In A Bind—Comparing Executive Compensation Regulations In The U.S. And The U.K., Bobby V. Reddy
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Drone Attacks And The Failure Of Securitisation In Pakistan, Satvinder S. Juss, Sahib S. Juss
Drone Attacks And The Failure Of Securitisation In Pakistan, Satvinder S. Juss, Sahib S. Juss
Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Global Guidance For Just Transition Policy: Policy Brief, Anna Dell'amico, Martin Dietrich Brauch, Lara Wallis, Alexandra A.K. Meisea
Global Guidance For Just Transition Policy: Policy Brief, Anna Dell'amico, Martin Dietrich Brauch, Lara Wallis, Alexandra A.K. Meisea
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
In 2015, the International Labour Organization (ILO) adopted Guidelines for a Just Transition Towards Environmentally Sustainable Economies and Societies for All, providing authoritative and valuable international guidance for just transitions. CCSI has conducted a comparative analysis of the application of the ILO Guidelines in South Africa and Germany and examined the extent to which the ILO Guidelines address energy transition challenges facing developing countries.
This CCSI Policy Brief summarizes the comparison between South Africa’s and Germany’s just transition policies and the ILO Guidelines. It also summarizes CCSI’s findings and recommendations to shape further guidance on just energy transition policymaking from …
Global Guidance For Just Transition Policy, Anna Dell'amico, Martin Dietrich Brauch, Lara Wallis, Alexandra A.K. Meisea
Global Guidance For Just Transition Policy, Anna Dell'amico, Martin Dietrich Brauch, Lara Wallis, Alexandra A.K. Meisea
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
In 2015, the International Labour Organization (ILO) adopted Guidelines for a Just Transition Towards Environmentally Sustainable Economies and Societies for All, providing authoritative and valuable international guidance for just transitions. CCSI has conducted a comparative analysis of the application of the ILO Guidelines in South Africa and Germany and examined the extent to which the ILO Guidelines address energy transition challenges facing developing countries.
The CCSI report, Global Guidance for Just Transition Policy, provides detailed context on South Africa’s and Germany’s national socio-political and energy conditions and policies, and comprehensively examines the legal and policy instruments adopted by both countries …
Criminalizing Ecocide, Rebecca Hamilton
Criminalizing Ecocide, Rebecca Hamilton
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
Amid widespread acknowledgment that we live on a planet in peril, the term “ecocide” packs a powerful rhetorical punch. Extant regulatory approaches to environmental protection feel insufficient in the face of the triple threat of climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss. International criminal prosecution for ecocide, by contrast, promises to meet the moment, and a recent proposal to introduce ecocide into the canon of core international crimes is gaining traction. Assuming the push to criminalize ecocide continues to gain momentum, this Article argues that the primary (and perhaps, sole) benefit that international criminal law can offer in this context is …
Balancing Local Community Interest And International Responsibilities In The Context Of The Expulsion Of Rohingya Refugees In Aceh, Muhammad Havez, Ninin Ernawati, Diva Pitaloka, Ahmad Rosidi, Joko Jumadi
Balancing Local Community Interest And International Responsibilities In The Context Of The Expulsion Of Rohingya Refugees In Aceh, Muhammad Havez, Ninin Ernawati, Diva Pitaloka, Ahmad Rosidi, Joko Jumadi
Indonesian Journal of International Law
At the end of 2023, a group of refugees that came to the Aceh region committed several acts of misconduct that shocked Indonesia. Such acts included throwing away rice that was given to them by the Acehnese residents, who did so as an act of kindness. However, the refugees disappointed the Acehnese residents with their response. Due to this, the Acehnese residents insist on expelling the refugees from their area, but the local government needed clarification in order to determine their position. On one hand, it is important to take note of the concerns of the Indonesian people, however, there …
Rohingya Persecution In Myanmar And Thoughts On Repatriation: Evidence From Rohingya Refugee Camps In Bangladesh, Md. Khalid Rahman, Md. Khaled Amin
Rohingya Persecution In Myanmar And Thoughts On Repatriation: Evidence From Rohingya Refugee Camps In Bangladesh, Md. Khalid Rahman, Md. Khaled Amin
Indonesian Journal of International Law
This study aimed to address the causes of systematic and repeated violence, extortion, torture, and persecution of Rohingya minority in Myanmar. Rohingyas were forcibly displaced from their land several times starting in 1978 to the border of Bangladesh by the Tatmadaw and the Buddhist majority. According to the United Nations (UN), within one and a half months after the exodus on 25, August 2017, Rohingyas had fled across the border, which was the largest refugee migration from Myanmar to Bangladesh. A total of 104 Rohingyas were surveyed using a structured questionnaire to investigate the causes of the mass violence. The …
Climate Change Refugees: Striving For An Established Definition For Broader And Better Management, Ayub Torry Satriyo Kusumo, Anugerah Adiastuti
Climate Change Refugees: Striving For An Established Definition For Broader And Better Management, Ayub Torry Satriyo Kusumo, Anugerah Adiastuti
Indonesian Journal of International Law
According to the Inter-governmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) 2021, The increase in global warming has accelerated the pace at which glaciers melt, thereby leading to a mass migration of people. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported that approximately 21.5 million people migrated to more decent places due to climate or geographical conditions. This category of people are often called climate refugees and when the apply for international refugee status, it is declined due to the inability to meet the established criteria outlined by the International Refugees Convention. Unfortunately, the phenomena associated with climate refugee have not …
'Othering' Of Refugees: An Anti-Thesis To Right Against Discrimination, Jasmeet Gulati
'Othering' Of Refugees: An Anti-Thesis To Right Against Discrimination, Jasmeet Gulati
Indonesian Journal of International Law
The process of ‘othering’ and the basis of ‘otherness’ separates marginal from the mainstream and is generally construed as discrimination amongst different social groups. The paper discusses the concept of ‘othering’ with specific reference to the rights of refugees, their plight in the country of refuge, and the attitude of national governments while dealing with the rights of refugees in compliance of international obligations. The process of characterizing refugees as ‘others’ in the host country directly affects their basic rights, which would otherwise be granted to them being refugees under international refugee law. Thus, discrimination stems from the very perspective …
Singapore Convention: Should Indonesia Ratify It?, Ahmad Rifa'i, Dimas Ramadhansyah
Singapore Convention: Should Indonesia Ratify It?, Ahmad Rifa'i, Dimas Ramadhansyah
Indonesian Journal of International Law
As cross-border trading develops, there is an increasing need for an effective dispute resolution system to solve disputes on business transactions. Mediation is a well-established method of efficient alternative dispute resolution that was recently internationally recognized under a specific treaty. The United Nations General Assembly took a resolution to adopt the United Nations Convention on International Settlement Resulting from Mediation (“Singapore Convention”). The Indonesian government has tried to boost foreign investment, but such efforts have been delayed due to a legal enforcement issue, which requires a legal reform to provide certainty for investors by providing a seamless and internationally recognized …
Implementation Of Iso 14001 Standard By World Trade Organization (Wto) Based On Technical Barriers To Trade (Tbt) Agreement And Its Practices In Indonesia, Ferdi Ferdi
Indonesian Journal of International Law
The implementation of the ISO 14001 standard by the World Trade Organization (WTO) has been regulated in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Agreement (Annex 1A WTO). ISO 14001 is an Environmental Management Standard (EMS) issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). ISO is one of the organizations that determine the international standard. The standard set by ISO has been utilized to equalize the standard of the WTO members in world trade (Preamble TBT Agreement). The WTO is an international organization regulating world trade to ensure it flows smoothly. TBT oversees that the technical regulations and standards, including packaging, …
Collective Attribution In Cyberspace: A Rebranded Version Of Attribution Does Not Make It More Effective, Dan Efrony
Collective Attribution In Cyberspace: A Rebranded Version Of Attribution Does Not Make It More Effective, Dan Efrony
International Law Studies
The international community has been unsuccessful in establishing an effective legal framework for holding States accountable for cyber wrongdoing. Instead, official political attribution—collectively denouncing States for irresponsible conduct in cyberspace—has become a common substitute to encourage compliance with voluntary non-binding international norms. Since December 2017, the United States and United Kingdom, along with their closest allies, have embraced and implemented collective attributions and responses. They thereby seek to shape “rules of the road” for responsible State behavior in cyberspace and to enhance accountability and deterrence. However, these attributions rely primarily on the outcomes of American and British attribution processes that …
Consulting To Avoid Kessler, Madison Walker
Consulting To Avoid Kessler, Madison Walker
Space and Defense
The consultation obligation of Article IX from the Outer Space Treaty may be used to create a framework for sharing space situational awareness data, globally, with the intention of facilitating enduring coordination agreements for collision avoidance.
Protecting The Cosmos: Defining Celestial Bodies In The Outer Space Treaty, David Epstein
Protecting The Cosmos: Defining Celestial Bodies In The Outer Space Treaty, David Epstein
Space and Defense
Lack of a clear definition of the term “celestial bodies” as used in the 1967 Outer Space Treaty risks exporting legal and political conflict into the cosmos. *This essay is updated from a previously published version and appears here by permission of the Journal of Space Law at Ole Miss.
Masthead, Table Of Contents & Introduction, Genevieve Renard Painter, Liam Mchugh-Russell
Masthead, Table Of Contents & Introduction, Genevieve Renard Painter, Liam Mchugh-Russell
Dalhousie Law Journal
The short reflections in this Dalhousie Law Journal symposium, “Thinking With and Against Pierre Schlag,” run in many directions. Somewhere in these pages, readers will find knowledge, provocation, distraction, and humour. Above all, though, the collection brings together five legal scholars to celebrate Pierre’s oeuvre, reflect on the ways it has inspired their own work, and examine how Pierre’s scholarship embodies the limits that it was pushing against. Pierre has graciously provided a response to round out the issue and set us all straight.
Atrocity Prevention In The Digital Era: Adapting Norms, Laws, And Code To Changes In The Ways Atrocities Are Committed, David J. Simon, Samhitha Josyula, Joshua Lam, Julian D. Melendi
Atrocity Prevention In The Digital Era: Adapting Norms, Laws, And Code To Changes In The Ways Atrocities Are Committed, David J. Simon, Samhitha Josyula, Joshua Lam, Julian D. Melendi
Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal
Emerging digital technologies have changed some of the ways that genocides are planned and executed. This paper examines those differences, calling attention to how changes in the execution of genocide should prompt a shift in the approaches to atrocity prevention. It develops a conceptual framework addressing how atrocity prevention efforts might adapt to new technology within three realms of potential prevention efforts: the ethical (norms), the legal (laws), and the digital (code).
The Loss & Damage Fund: Will It Leave Greenland Behind?, Natalie L. Nowatzke
The Loss & Damage Fund: Will It Leave Greenland Behind?, Natalie L. Nowatzke
Ocean and Coastal Law Journal
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) maintains three pillars of international climate governance: (1) mitigation, (2) adaptation, and (3) loss and damage. Loss and damage, the newest pillar, refers to the negative effects of climate change that transpire despite mitigation and adaptation measures. This notion has manifested into the newly operationalized Loss and Damage Fund, which is designed to compensate developing nations for the losses and damages that occur. This Comment identifies a gap in the Loss and Damage Fund, which will leave Greenland left out of receiving compensation, despite being extremely vulnerable to climate change, because …
Arctic Policy Considerations For Scottish Independence, Mason Mcinnis Brewer
Arctic Policy Considerations For Scottish Independence, Mason Mcinnis Brewer
Ocean and Coastal Law Journal
The ongoing effects of climate change on the Arctic environment raises the geopolitical importance of the Arctic and nearby regions, such as the broader High North. With deteriorating relations between Russia and much of the international community, changes to international borders in these regions would undoubtedly be a concern for those with Arctic interests. Consequently, due to Scotland’s location in the world, the legal analysis surrounding any Scottish claim to external self-determination under international law would include Arctic considerations. Following a review of the Artic policy priorities of the U.K. and Scottish governments, and each government's involvement in developing those …
Sea Ice And The Law Of The Sea: The Myth Of Article 234, Amanda H. Lynch, Charles H. Norchi
Sea Ice And The Law Of The Sea: The Myth Of Article 234, Amanda H. Lynch, Charles H. Norchi
Ocean and Coastal Law Journal
The sea ice of Article 234 of UNCLOS represents not the physical ice of the Arctic Ocean but a negotiated myth of ice as it affects the Arctic littoral states. The stability of this prescription is threatened by anthropogenic climate change causing a preferential evacuation of ice from the eastern Arctic compared to the western Arctic, as well as expectations for a possible future ice-free Arctic. This is leading to an intensification of claims on marine space. The irreducible uncertainties of the future trajectory of Arctic change demands a dynamic response. The myth of Article 234 will ultimately align with …
Projections For Arctic Marine Accessibility: Risk Under Climate Change, Xueke Li, Amanda H. Lynch
Projections For Arctic Marine Accessibility: Risk Under Climate Change, Xueke Li, Amanda H. Lynch
Ocean and Coastal Law Journal
Few transformations in Earth systems are as dramatic as those currently occurring in the Arctic. We reveal the emergence of a new route regime in response to the evolving context of climate change and human pressures. This paradigm shift presents both opportunities for Arctic exploration and maritime trade, as well as risks for marine ecosystems and coastal communities. It underscores the need for concerted efforts to recalibrate the associated legal framework.