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Full-Text Articles in International Law
Vol. 45 Masthead
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Reassessing The Rule Of Law Legacy Of The Khmer Rouge Tribunal, Randle C. Defalco
Reassessing The Rule Of Law Legacy Of The Khmer Rouge Tribunal, Randle C. Defalco
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
The focal point of transitional justice efforts in Cambodia have been recently-completed criminal prosecutions at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (“ECCC”). Like other international criminal justice institutions, the ECCC has been framed as not only a criminal court, but also as an institution capable of helping achieve various transitional justice goals such as improving the rule of law and respect for human rights domestically in Cambodia. This Article identifies troubling connections between the ECCC experience and the Cambodian government’s increasing use of rule by law tactics in recent years. The Article identifies two related ways in which …
Volume 45, Issue 3 Masthead
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Defrosting Regulatory Chill, Guillermo J. Garcia Sanchez
Defrosting Regulatory Chill, Guillermo J. Garcia Sanchez
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
In Homer’s Odyssey, King Odysseus asked his men to tie him to the mast of his ship with the hope that he would not jump into the sea after listening to the Sirens. The Odyssey’s hero made a pact to bind himself in the future. He knew that the temptation would be impossible to resist without restraints. Similarly, the creators and advocates of international investment agreements believe that providing rights to foreign investors through international treaties will chill State policies that would harm the interests of investors in the future. The “rope” to tie the State is the threat of …
"Confucius" And America's Dangerous Myths About Chinese Law, Daniel Butler Friedman
"Confucius" And America's Dangerous Myths About Chinese Law, Daniel Butler Friedman
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
American legal scholars can’t stop talking about Confucius: there were over 100 law review articles in 2022 alone that reference Confucian ideas, and nearly 1,500 during the last five years. Almost all of them are wrong about what Confucius has meant for Chinese legal culture. In the face of five decades of contrary historical scholarship, these law review articles argue or imply that Chinese law started to become “Confucian” about 2,000 years ago and has never really changed since. That continuity (or stagnation), these scholars claim, is one of the keys to understanding contemporary Chinese law. As this Article will …
Self-Executing International Agreements And Private Rights Of Action: Revisiting The 4th Restatement Of Foreign Relations Law In The Context Of International Trade And Investment Agreements, Matthew P. Schaefer
Self-Executing International Agreements And Private Rights Of Action: Revisiting The 4th Restatement Of Foreign Relations Law In The Context Of International Trade And Investment Agreements, Matthew P. Schaefer
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
Judicial enforcement of U.S. international agreements has long puzzled courts and scholars. By building upon the Supreme Court’s 2008 Medellin opinion, the 4th Restatement of Foreign Relations Law’s Sections 310 and 311 adopted in 2018 make a significant advance in further distinguishing and clarifying how to determine whether a treaty is self-executing, whether it creates a private right of action, and the ramifications for judicial enforcement of those determinations. However, an examination of modern major international trade and investment agreements reveals that there are additional refinements and more to say on the topic than covered by the 4th Restatement.
First, …
On The Exhaustion Of Local Remedies: Reconciling Sovereignty And Justice Before The European Court Of Human Rights, Alara Hanci
On The Exhaustion Of Local Remedies: Reconciling Sovereignty And Justice Before The European Court Of Human Rights, Alara Hanci
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
Europe has a rule of law crisis. In the past decade, Turkey, Poland, and Hungary have undermined their democratic societies and compromised the independence of their institutions by affording unprecedented strength to their executive branch and imposing severe restrictions on the public sphere. As their illiberal policies spread, so does the frequency with which individuals adversely affected by these policies seek justice before the European Court of Human Rights. In these cases, Article 35(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights requires that they first exhaust the local remedies available in their national legal system.
Article 35(1) reflects the role …
War, Shelly Aviv Yeini
War, Shelly Aviv Yeini
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
International Tax Reform: Who Gets A Seat At The Table?, Assaf Harpaz
International Tax Reform: Who Gets A Seat At The Table?, Assaf Harpaz
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
The Shift In Power Distribution And Its Influence On The Law Of The Sea, Youngmin Seo
The Shift In Power Distribution And Its Influence On The Law Of The Sea, Youngmin Seo
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
Power and its distribution have always been the central themes of international law, yet international lawyers have paid limited attention to the correlation between power shifts and legal change. Notably, international law effectively operates when balance of power is sustained. With this qualification, this paper examines the relationship of international law with the change in power distribution, arguing that international law should proactively attend to power in order to contribute to the peaceful reconfiguration of the international system. Furthermore, this paper explores the mechanism of power shift being transmitted to law shift and specifically adduces the process and effectiveness of …
Examining The Inadequacy Of The Gatt's Rules-Exceptions Paradigm In The Fight Against Climate Change: The Case For A Wto Climate Waiver, Sarah Ahmad
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
With the gradual deterioration of climate change, the World Trade Organization (“WTO”) faces a dilemma: how much leeway can the institution give its members to pursue trade-restrictive climate action while safeguarding the strength and integrity of the international trading system? The nexus between trade and climate change has become increasingly recognized, with the first-ever “trade day” to be held at this year’s COP28. This linkage gives rise to the question of how the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (“GATT”), laying the legal foundations for the WTO, accommodates members’ mitigatory climate action. In this regard, the GATT strictly separates the …
Exploiting Seabed Law, Stephen Cody, Jeffrey Feldmann
Exploiting Seabed Law, Stephen Cody, Jeffrey Feldmann
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
Private companies and sovereign States have begun mining the deep sea for polymetallic nodules that contain precious minerals, including cobalt, nickel, copper, and magnesium. In 2021, the small island nation of Nauru triggered a procedural “two-year rule” that requires the International Seabed Authority (ISA) to finalize regulations for deep sea mining (DSM) or consider the provisional approval of commercial exploitation applications. This two-year deadline passed in July 2023 without any resolution. ISA Members States continue to debate a precautionary moratorium on deep sea mining operations in light of inadequate scientific and environmental information about deep sea ecosystems. Meanwhile, advocates argue …
Climate Neutrality And Sustainability In International Trade, Rafael Leal-Arcas, Luis Ulloa Martinez, Victory Abang, Krishma Kapur, Saffron Greenwood, Konstantinos Chatzopoulos, Archana Nair, Lisa Schoettmer
Climate Neutrality And Sustainability In International Trade, Rafael Leal-Arcas, Luis Ulloa Martinez, Victory Abang, Krishma Kapur, Saffron Greenwood, Konstantinos Chatzopoulos, Archana Nair, Lisa Schoettmer
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Judging China: The Chinese Legal System In U.S. Courts, Donald Clarke
Judging China: The Chinese Legal System In U.S. Courts, Donald Clarke
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Trademark Restrictions As Instruments Of Public Health Retrenchment, Patricia L. Judd
Trademark Restrictions As Instruments Of Public Health Retrenchment, Patricia L. Judd
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Post-Pandemic Constitutionalism: Covid-19 As A Game-Changer For “Common Principles”?, Arianna Vedaschi, Chiara Graziani
Post-Pandemic Constitutionalism: Covid-19 As A Game-Changer For “Common Principles”?, Arianna Vedaschi, Chiara Graziani
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Lay Bare Its Hidden Frame: The Deprivation Of Foreign Isis Fighter's Citizenship In Denmark, The Netherlands, And The United Kingdom, Helena Von Nagy
Lay Bare Its Hidden Frame: The Deprivation Of Foreign Isis Fighter's Citizenship In Denmark, The Netherlands, And The United Kingdom, Helena Von Nagy
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
With the rise of ISIS came the return of banishment. Ministers for security, immigration, or justice in many European countries now may revoke individuals’ citizenships based on the suspicion of their involvement with ISIS. Despite the universality of human rights, citizenship plays a fundamental role in international human rights law and protections. It is the key legal connection between the individual and the human rights system. Appropriately, that human rights law protects against the arbitrary deprivation of citizenship. However, those same treaties empower States with the option to remove individuals’ citizenship if they act in ways prejudicial to the interests …
Economic Inequality In The Age Of Human Rights, Daniel Benoliel
Economic Inequality In The Age Of Human Rights, Daniel Benoliel
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
The monstrous pendulum of inequality in the twenty-first century swings sideways amid welfare economics and egalitarianism. Horizontal inequalities embodied by pro-poor policy on grounds such as gender, race, and disability, have long been core international human rights concerns. Yet, gross inequalities in economic status, nationally and globally, are still poorly conceptualized by legal scholars, policymakers, and practitioners.
In search of a policy lever, this article argues that as far as economic theory goes, neither theoretical nor empirical economic research adequately correlates economic inequalities and growth. That is, beyond horizontal inequalities concerning the extreme poor. As economic research remains inept in …
Sanctions, Nukes And Juche: Franchising In North Korea, Robert W. Emerson, Jason R. Parnell
Sanctions, Nukes And Juche: Franchising In North Korea, Robert W. Emerson, Jason R. Parnell
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Getting Involved In The Technology Sector: The Role Of Sovereign Wealth Funds And Their Challenges To International Economic Governance, Mengjing Kong
Getting Involved In The Technology Sector: The Role Of Sovereign Wealth Funds And Their Challenges To International Economic Governance, Mengjing Kong
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Peaceful Purposes Reservations In The Law Of The Sea Convention And The Regulation Of Military Exercises Or Maneuvers In The Exclusive Economic Zone, Henrique Marcos, Eduardo Cavalcanti De Mello Filho
Peaceful Purposes Reservations In The Law Of The Sea Convention And The Regulation Of Military Exercises Or Maneuvers In The Exclusive Economic Zone, Henrique Marcos, Eduardo Cavalcanti De Mello Filho
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Legal Systems Inside Out: American Legal Exceptionalism And China’S Dream Of Legal Cosmopolitanism, Matthew S. Erie
Legal Systems Inside Out: American Legal Exceptionalism And China’S Dream Of Legal Cosmopolitanism, Matthew S. Erie
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
Rethinking Ocean Exclusivity: The Case Of Human Rights, Naama Omri, Gershon Hasin
Rethinking Ocean Exclusivity: The Case Of Human Rights, Naama Omri, Gershon Hasin
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
The International Norm Against Unjust Enrichment And State Enrichment Through The Harmful Conduct Of Private Parties, Ariel Zemach
The International Norm Against Unjust Enrichment And State Enrichment Through The Harmful Conduct Of Private Parties, Ariel Zemach
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
States are often enriched by the flow to their coffers of wealth accrued to private actors through internationally harmful conduct such as overfishing, acts causing transboundary air or marine pollution, cyber attacks, and international corruption. A portion of the wealth acquired by private actors through such conduct is often passed on to the State through its tax system. This article argues that this form of income to the State triggers the application of the international norm against unjust enrichment. Under the international law of unjust enrichment, such income could give rise to a duty of restitution owed by the enriched …
Relational Human Rights Responsibility, Joyce De Coninck
Relational Human Rights Responsibility, Joyce De Coninck
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
When a private corporation cooperates with States as well as international organizations, and conduct stemming from this cooperation results in international human rights violations, who can be held legally responsible?
This Article dissects systemic deficiencies in the traditionally state-centric human rights regime and challenges its inadequacies when dealing with contemporary forms of transnational cooperative governance. Transnational cooperative governance refers to modes of cooperation in which States, and different non- State actors work together in addressing transnational concerns that cannot be adequately regulated by any one of these actors alone.
Using border management cooperation between HawkEye 360, the European Union, and …
Navigating A Human Rights Roadblock: Making The Case For The Women's Equality Act, Mostafa El-Harazi
Navigating A Human Rights Roadblock: Making The Case For The Women's Equality Act, Mostafa El-Harazi
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
The fight to protect women’s rights is critical now more than ever. The World Bank has noted that women throughout the world “have only three quarters of the legal rights afforded to men.”1 On the domestic front in the United States, the battleground remains fraught with blows to the women’s rights movement, especially on the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic and the rollback of reproductive rights. Statements made by the Biden Administration in support of global women’s rights, for example, have been met with inadequate action on the legislative front; the most pertinent standstill has come from the fight over …
From Global Databases To Global Norms? The Case Of Cultural Property Law, Amnon Lehavi
From Global Databases To Global Norms? The Case Of Cultural Property Law, Amnon Lehavi
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.
(Re)Constructing An International Crime: Interpreting Sexual Victimhood In The Rohingya Genocide And Beyond, David Eichert
(Re)Constructing An International Crime: Interpreting Sexual Victimhood In The Rohingya Genocide And Beyond, David Eichert
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
This Article argues that legal actors use narratives of gendered violence to generate intelligible victimhood categories when investigating and prosecuting sexual harm. Building upon several critical legal traditions, I argue that lawyers working on issues of sexual violence are constantly engaged in a dual process of interpretation wherein they attempt to confirm (1) if a sexual crime has occurred, and (2) whether the crime is severe enough to deserve inclusion in justice efforts. Instead of understanding this process as a simple “investigation” into a pre-existing reality, I argue that legal actors constitute both the crime and the identities of the …
Legal Gender Recognition In Nepal And Comparative Context, Holning Lau, Mara Malagodi
Legal Gender Recognition In Nepal And Comparative Context, Holning Lau, Mara Malagodi
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
The Supreme Court of Nepal was a groundbreaker when it ruled in Pant v. Nepal (2007) that people have the right to change their gender on identity documents based on “self-feelings” and “self-determination” as opposed to medical or other criteria. At the time, no other national apex court or national government had so clearly prioritized self-determination as the guiding principle for resolving matters concerning gender identity. The decision in Pant, however, focused on people of “third gender,” in other words people who identify as neither male nor female. Now, the Supreme Court of Nepal is considering the case of a …
From Forecast To Five-Cast: The Arbitral Promise Of Africa, Justin B. Prelogar
From Forecast To Five-Cast: The Arbitral Promise Of Africa, Justin B. Prelogar
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
No abstract provided.