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Read more at: CILJ-LCIL Annual Lecture 2022-2023: 'Implementing International Law: Capacity-Building, Coordination and Control' - Margaret Young, University of Melbourne

CILJ-LCIL Annual Lecture 2022-2023: 'Implementing International Law: Capacity-Building, Coordination and Control' - Margaret Young, University of Melbourne

Lecture summary: How do state officials learn and implement obligations from multiple regimes? Global problems do not fit neatly into siloed fields of professional specialisation. For example, of the increasingly alarming problems facing the ocean – climate change, marine plastics debris, biodiversity loss, or overfishing – not one can be addressed without inter-agency cooperation and policy coherence at the national level. Yet the practical, operational, and theoretical challenges of coordination deserve more attention by international lawyers. This lecture builds on Professor Young’s experience with collaborative training initiatives in ocean governance in the Asia-Pacific and Africa, to which United Nations agencies, the World Bank and academic partners contribute. It points to the legal and other factors that establish priorities and hierarchies. Rather than simply technical or managerial issues of implementation, the lecture describes the high stakes of integrative initiatives such as ‘blue carbon’ programmes, the prohibition of fisheries subsidies or the protection of seafarers. It seeks to account for collaborative capacity-building activities according to the precepts of sovereignty, the duty to cooperate and regime interaction in international law. Professor Margaret A Young FAAL is a Professor at Melbourne Law School who specialises in public international law, the law of the sea, international trade law, climate change and environmental law.


Read more at: Work in Progress Seminar: 'Approaching the Global Corporation in International Law' - Prof Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne

Work in Progress Seminar: 'Approaching the Global Corporation in International Law' - Prof Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne

Professor Pahuja was recently awarded an ARC Laureate Fellowship for her project The Corporate Challenge to Democracy: Harnessing International Law. The starting point for the project is a widely shared intuition: that the rising power of global corporations poses a serious challenge to democratic rule within nation-states. Corporations have gone global, but the mechanisms to ensure they serve the public interest, pay tax and comply with national laws have not. Efforts are frustrated by a mismatch between the global operational structure of multinational corporations, and their national legal form. The intuition sparking the project is that international law - not corporate governance or national laws – is central to creating this disjuncture. And so, the essence of the research program is to understand the rise and influence of global corporations as a question of international law. To do this, the team will take a long historical approach, framed through the lens of authority, and rival forms of law, to consider how the mobility of corporations has been and is facilitated, how rights are created, and how corporate power is produced and made effective through and by law. The overall aim of the project is to produce a new historical, theoretical and conceptual understanding of the relationship between corporations, states, state law and international law from the early modern period to the present day. In this informal seminar, Prof Pahuja will outline the project, possibly map existing approaches, and describe its key elements with the intention of starting a conversation with Lauterpacht Centre researchers, to launch future collaboration. Sundhya Pahuja is ARC Kathleen Fitzpatrick Laureate Professor, Director of the Laureate Program in Global Corporations and International law, and Director of the Institute for International Law and the Humanities at the Melbourne Law School. She is currently Leverhulme Visiting Professor at Cambridge.


Read more at: CANCELLED: LCIL Friday Lecture: 'Competing Theories of Treaty Interpretation and the Divided Application by Investor-State Tribunals of Articles 31 and 32 of the VCLT' - Judge Charles N Brower, Twenty Essex

CANCELLED: LCIL Friday Lecture: 'Competing Theories of Treaty Interpretation and the Divided Application by Investor-State Tribunals of Articles 31 and 32 of the VCLT' - Judge Charles N Brower, Twenty Essex

Due to industrial action this event has been postponed until Friday 17 February 2023. Lecture summary: It is alleged that the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) embodied the victory of Sir Gerald Fitzmaurice’s preference to interpret treaties based on the “ordinary meaning of the words” over Sir Hersh Lauterpacht’s view that one instead should seek to ascertain the treaty parties’ “actual intentions.” But is that so? If, as VCLT Article 31(1) provides, the focus is to be on “the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose,” and if that “ordinary meaning” is not, as per Article 32, “ambiguous,” “obscure,” “manifestly absurd or unreasonable,” then why should resort to “Supplementary Means of Interpretation” be appropriate at all “in order to confirm the meaning resulting from the application of article 31”? If, as many believe, the VCLT is hierarchical, shouldn’t interpretation be complete when an “ordinary meaning” is established that is “unambiguous,” not “obscure,” and “neither manifestly absurd or unreasonable”? Did those preferring to determine the treaty parties “actual intentions” in fact sneak into the VLCT’s text that provision for supplementary “confirmation” of a clear “ordinary meaning”? Is to that extent the VCLT in fact, as is said of treaties generally, “an agreement to disagree”? In reality, given the sequential submissions in international arbitrations, as well as before international courts and tribunals, each party, beginning with the Applicant’s or Claimant’s Memorial, followed by Respondent’s Counter-Memorial, the Reply Memorial etc., from the start places before the adjudicator all of its arguments under Section 3. of the VCLT (Articles 31-33). Judge Charles N Brower’s career has been divided between private law practice, first with White & Case LLP in New York City and Washington, D.C., since 2001 as an Arbitrator Member of Twenty Essex Chambers in London, and public service, first with the Office of The Legal Adviser of the U.S. Department of State (1969-73)(successively as Assistant Legal Adviser for European Affairs, Deputy Legal Adviser and Acting Legal Adviser), as Judge of the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal (1983-present), as sub-Cabinet rank Deputy Special Counsellor to the President of the United States dealing with the Iran-Contra affair (1987), as Judge ad hoc of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (1999-2002)(appointed by Bolivia), and the most -appointed of the only five Americans ever to be appointed Judge ad hoc of the International Court of Justice (2014-2022) (appointed by Colombia (1 case) and the United States (2 cases)).


Read more at: 'The Inner Logic of International Law' - Adil Ahmad Haque, Rutgers Law School

'The Inner Logic of International Law' - Adil Ahmad Haque, Rutgers Law School

Lecture summary: How does international law change? Must international law await change by external political intervention from outside the legal system? Or does international law provide reasons for its own development to those empowered to develop it? To address these questions, we should draw on an unlikely source. Joseph Raz was one of the greatest legal philosophers of all time. But he wrote relatively little about international law until the last decade of his life. Nevertheless, we should draw on Raz’s ideas to illuminate three pathways of international legal change: in the law of treaties, in customary international law, and in international adjudication. Adil Ahmad Haque is a Professor of Law and Judge Jon O Newman Scholar at Rutgers Law School. Professor Haque writes on the law and ethics of armed conflict, and the philosophy of international law. His first book, Law and Morality at War, was published by Oxford University Press in 2017.


Read more at: Global Corporations and International Law PhD/Early Career Researcher Workshop

Global Corporations and International Law PhD/Early Career Researcher Workshop

Date: 15 & 16 December 2022 - Times: tbc Venue: The Finley Library, Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, Cambridge, UK Proposals due by 19 October 2022 Proposals are invited for short presentations on any aspect of the intersection of international law and the corporation. The task is to offer a narrative in a way which centres on or starts with the company or corporation, rather than with other entities. We encourage proposals from other disciplines that engage with this approach and research questions that centre international law and the corporation. Organised by Professors Sundhya Pahuja (Melbourne) and Surabhi Ranganathan (Cambridge) . For further details please visit: PhD/Early Career Researcher Workshop (unimelb.edu.au)


Read more at: LCIL Friday Lecture: 'Why Systemic Integration Matters Now' - Professor Campbell McLachlan KC

LCIL Friday Lecture: 'Why Systemic Integration Matters Now' - Professor Campbell McLachlan KC

Lecture summary: What explains the persistence of the idea of international law’s systematicity in view of its decentralised nature, constantly dependent upon the shifting consent of states and the vagaries of political will? To what extent can its systemic character endure and adapt as the tectonic plates of geo-politics shift? In this lecture, Campbell McLachlan critically re-examines the evidence for the impulse to integrate the disparate elements of international law into a coherent system: the impulse that underpins the principle of systemic integration. He does so in light of the practice of states and international tribunals, which has deepened over the last fifteen years since his research on the principle for the ILC Fragmentation Study Group in 2005. He tests the fruits of this internal analytical perspective against both an increasing scholarly critique and the external disintegrative pressures that the system currently faces––pressures that appear to challenge the very value of global cooperation under law that underpins the idea of systematicity. Campbell McLachlan KC is Professor of Law at Victoria University of Wellington and 2022–23 Arthur Goodhart Visiting Professor of Legal Science in the University of Cambridge.