skip to content
 

Fabian serves as a Charles & Katharine Darwin Research Fellow at Darwin College, University of Cambridge, and is also a Fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law. His primary research interests span general international law—with a particular emphasis on dispute settlement and state responsibility—international investment law and international environmental law. At present, his research focuses on national security, the concept of “self-judgment”, state-owned corporations, and the procedure of international courts and tribunals.

Fabian holds a PhD in Law from the University of Cambridge, which was supported by a W.M. Tapp Studentship of Gonville & Caius College and a scholarship from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation. During his PhD studies, he was an International and Comparative Law Research Fellow at the University of Michigan Law School. Prior to joining the University of Cambridge, he was a Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg. Fabian read law at Bucerius Law School, Hamburg (Dipl. Jur.), Waseda University, Tokyo (exchange), the University of Oxford (M.Jur.), and he is qualified to practise law in Germany (Volljurist). His writing has received several awards, including the Rosalyn Higgins Prize from The Law and Practice of International Courts & Tribunals and the Prize for Best Article in International Dispute Resolution by the Dispute Resolution Interest Group of the American Society of International Law.

He is an Associate Editor of the British Yearbook of International Law.