skip to content
 
Read more at: CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Investor-State Dispute Settlement' - Audley Sheppard KC

CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Investor-State Dispute Settlement' - Audley Sheppard KC

This is an in-person event. Speaker: Audley Sheppard KC, Twenty Essex Cambridge University Arbitration Society (CUArb) was established in 2019 as a Registered Society at the University of Cambridge. It aims at promoting the study of international arbitration among students, academics, alumni, and law practitioners in the field. This lecture is part of the CUArb/LCIL Lecture series.


Read more at: CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Parallel Proceedings' - Salim Moollan KC, Brick Court

CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Parallel Proceedings' - Salim Moollan KC, Brick Court

This is an in-person event. Speaker: Salim Moollan KC, Brick Court Cambridge University Arbitration Society (CUArb) was established in 2019 as a Registered Society at the University of Cambridge. It aims at promoting the study of international arbitration among students, academics, alumni, and law practitioners in the field. This lecture is part of the CUArb/LCIL Lecture series.


Read more at: CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Costs of Arbitration and Third-Party Funding’ – Sachin Trikha, Clifford Chance

CUArb/LCIL Lecture series: 'Costs of Arbitration and Third-Party Funding’ – Sachin Trikha, Clifford Chance

This is an in-person event. Speaker: Sachin Trikha , Partner, Clifford Chance Cambridge University Arbitration Society (CUArb) was established in 2019 as a Registered Society at the University of Cambridge. It aims at promoting the study of international arbitration among students, academics, alumni, and law practitioners in the field. This lecture is part of the CUArb/LCIL Lecture series.


Read more at: Friday Lecture: 'The Law of State Succession: Principles and Practice' - Dr Arman Sarvarian, University of Surrey

Friday Lecture: 'The Law of State Succession: Principles and Practice' - Dr Arman Sarvarian, University of Surrey

There is a sandwich lunch at 12.30 pm in the Old Library at the Centre. All lecture attendees welcome. Dr Arman Sarvarian will speak about his forthcoming monograph The Law of State Succession: Principles and Practice to be published by Oxford University Press in April. The product of seven years’ labour of approximately 170,000 words, the work includes a foreword by Professor August Reinisch of the University of Vienna and International Law Commission. The following is the summary of Oxford University Press: 'The Law of State Succession: Principles and Practice provides a comprehensive, practical, and empirical overview of the topic, establishing State succession as a distinct field with a cohesive set of rules. From the secession of the United States of America in 1784 to that of South Sudan in 2011, the book digests and analyses State practice spanning more than two centuries. It is based on research into a wide and diverse range of case studies, including archival and previously unpublished data. Reconstructing the intellectual foundation of the field, the book offers a vision for its progressive development - one that is rooted in an interpretation of State practice that transcends the politics of the codification projects in the decolonization and desovietization eras.


Read more at: Evening event: 'Textbooks: markers and makers of international law' - Dr Luíza Leão Soares Pereira, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

Evening event: 'Textbooks: markers and makers of international law' - Dr Luíza Leão Soares Pereira, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

Time: 5.30 pm - 6.30 pm (followed by a drinks reception in the Old Library) In-person event only You never forget your first… international law textbook. Most of us have an emotional, even if not loving, relationship to those tomes that initiated us into the discipline (Koskenniemi M, ‘Book Review Brownlie’s Principles of Public International Law’ (2014) 83 BYIL 137, 137). Yet textbooks receive limited attention as scholarship. Cast as training tools that do not encapsulate original insights by virtue of their genre, we tend to miss how their comprehensiveness paints a broad and nuanced picture of international law and its place in world making. I propose in this lecture that we analyse textbooks as artefacts that help us better understand our discipline and profession. In particular, I will be discussing the insights gained by empirical analysis of the ten main international law textbooks in Brazil undertaken by myself and Fabio Morosini over the last four years (Pereira LLS and Morosini FC, ‘Textbooks as Markers and Makers of International Law: A Brazilian Case Study’ (2024) 35 European Journal of International Law 1). We examined the themes these volumes explore, the materials they cite, and the biographies of their authors. The results we obtained provide not only a unique window into the content of Brazilian textbooks themselves but also a complex, historically and socially situated picture of international law as a field in Brazil. I will then talk about our ongoing project to expand our analysis of textbooks beyond Brazil. In the last year, we have invited others to join our enterprise to study textbooks from other regions (Africa, Asia, the Arab World, and certain specific jurisdictions), and other sub-disciplines of international law (Human Rights, International Economic Law, International Environmental Law, to name a few). We also interviewed textbook authors from diverse nationalities, backgrounds, and methodological persuasions, and invited scholars to bend the academic genre and write short essays engaging with the textbook theme in a creative way. What we hope to achieve in this project is to revisit textbooks and their function beyond training materials, unveiling their analytical, political and social possibilities. This research project is funded by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq). Dr Luíza Leão Soares Pereira is a Brazilian international lawyer, trained at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (Porto Alegre, Brazil) and the University of Cambridge. She was a Lecturer at the University of Sheffield (2020-2022), and is now a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, funded by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq). She is considers herself a generalist, but her work uses varied methodologies (empirical, historical, sociological, feminist, critical) to better understand the international legal discipline and profession, broadly construed. Her work has been published in the European Journal of International Law, the Leiden Journal of International Law, and edited volumes published by Oxford University Press (1, 2) and Manchester University Press.


Read more at: Friday Lecture: 'Explaining Sudan’s Catastrophe: From Popular Revolution to Coup, War and Famine' - Prof Sharath Srinivasan, University of Cambridge

Friday Lecture: 'Explaining Sudan’s Catastrophe: From Popular Revolution to Coup, War and Famine' - Prof Sharath Srinivasan, University of Cambridge

Summary: This talk explains Sudan’s descent into a horrific war that is the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. The war has displaced over 11 million people, involved the targeting of civilians, including especially women, in mass violence, and precipitated a hunger crisis affecting over 24 million people, with over 630,000 currently facing famine. How, after a momentous civilian uprising in 2018-19 that toppled the dictator Omer el-Bashir after 30 years of authoritarian rule, did Sudan come to this? Unravelling the causes and events that led to tragedy begins with how counter-revolutionary actors within the State benefitted from the priorities of external peacemakers seeking to achieve a democratic transition in order to displace revolutionary forces, before carrying out a coup against that very transition. The war erupted when the counter-revolution itself unravelled, and its two primary bedfellows, the Sudan Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces fell-out violently with each other in a struggle for power. With complex regional geopolitical entanglements and drawing in other armed groups in Sudan, their war to the bitter end has mixed cruel indifference and intentional harm towards civilians in devastating ways. Remarkably, the revolutionary spirit of the Sudanese has not been vanquished, and has found expression in how neighbourhood resistance committees have transformed into ‘emergency response rooms’ to deliver life-saving support. Sudan’s plight and prospects lie precariously within these intersecting trajectories. Sharath Srinivasan is David and Elaine Potter Professor of International Politics at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. He is also Founding Director, and currently Co-Director, of the University of Cambridge's Centre of Governance and Human Rights (CGHR). Professor Srinivasan is a Fellow and Trustee of the Rift Valley Institute and a Trustee and Vice-President of the British Institute in Eastern Africa. Professor Srinivasan’s work focuses on contentious politics in Africa in global perspective, from explaining failed peace interventions in civil wars to rethinking democratic politics in a digital age. He is the author of When Peace Kills Politics: International Intervention and Unending Wars in the Sudans (Hurst/Oxford University Press, 2021) and co-editor of Making and Breaking Peace in Sudan and South Sudan: The Comprehensive Peace Agreement and Beyond (British Academy/Oxford University Press, 2020). The Friday Lunchtime Lecture series is kindly supported by Cambridge University Press & Assessment .


Read more at: Friday lecture: ‘Property Rights at Sea’ - Prof Richard Barnes, University of Lincoln

Friday lecture: ‘Property Rights at Sea’ - Prof Richard Barnes, University of Lincoln

Lecture summary: Property is a fundamental legal institution governing the use of things: who may own what, how and why. Given that such questions extend to a wide range of natural resources essential to human well-being, such as food, water and shelter, then it is reasonable to assume that human rights should play an important role in shaping property rights discourse and practice. And yet this assumption is somewhat misplaced. The relationship between property and human rights and property remains relatively underdeveloped in both practice and academic literature, and virtually non-existent when we move to the maritime domain. In this paper, I explore and question the role that property and human rights can and should play in the maritime domain. I outline how such rights arise and are protected under human rights instruments, before exploring how they might inform the moral and legal distribution of resources. In particular, I focus on how we might balance individual rights and public interests that arise in respect of property, and how these are informed by the nature of the oceans as a commons. Richard Barnes is Professor of International Law at the University of Lincoln and Adjunct Professor of Law at the Norwegian Centre for the Law of the Sea, the University of Tromsø. The Friday Lunchtime Lecture series is kindly supported by Cambridge University Press & Assessment .


Read more at: Panel: '(Non-)Defining 'Gender' in the Crimes Against Humanity Draft: Possibilities, Alliances, and Strategies'

Panel: '(Non-)Defining 'Gender' in the Crimes Against Humanity Draft: Possibilities, Alliances, and Strategies'

Feminist activists, country representatives, and other civil society actors have debated how to define “gender” in international criminal law (ICL) for at least three decades. In the Rome Conference that established the International Criminal Court (ICC) and its Statute in 1998, defining “gender” was a hotly debated topic of negotiation. More recently, this debate has resurfaced in the steps leading to the International Law Commission’s Draft Articles for a Crimes Against Humanity Treaty, and continues to be discussed in the deliberations at the Sixth Committee on the Draft Articles. The CAH Convention is now expected to be negotiated between 2026-2029, and, more than a mere point of contention, the concept of ‘gender’ in its text can be crucial for prosecuting sexual and gender-based international crimes and thus fundamental to gender justice efforts worldwide. With this in mind, this roundtable gathers scholars and activists studying and working (often simultaneously) on the definition of gender in international criminal law, in an effort to learn from their specific positionalities, perceptions, and experiences about the challenges, strategies, and possibilities for (non-)defining the term. Speakers: Akila Radhakrishnan (Atlantic Council) Alexandra Lily Kather (Emergent Justice Collective) Dr Rosemary Grey (Sydney Law School) Professor Valerie Oosterveld (Faculty of Law, Western University) Moderators: Dr Juliana Santos de Carvalho (LCIL Fellow and INT ACDF Fellow at the University of Cambridge Centre for Gender Studies) Dr Lena Holzer (LCIL Fellow and Assistant Professor in Gender, Race and the Law in the Law Faculty at the University of Cambridge)


Read more at: Friday Lecture: 'I’m not the Villain I appear to be: Freedom of religion or belief in human rights law' - Prof Nazila Ghanea, University of Oxford

Friday Lecture: 'I’m not the Villain I appear to be: Freedom of religion or belief in human rights law' - Prof Nazila Ghanea, University of Oxford

There is a sandwich lunch at 12.30 pm in the Old Library at the Centre. All lecture attendees welcome. Register here if attending online Lecture summary: The role of freedom of religion or belief in international human rights law is often overshadowed by reservations on the basis of religion or religious law, and violence or violations in the name of religion in relation to a whole host of rights. And that is before one accounts for the politicisation and instrumentalization of religion for suspect objectives. Freedom of religion or belief therefore appears as the villain and not the ally of human rights. This lecture will explore some of the ways in which freedom of religion or belief has reasserted not only its claim as a human right but as a necessary precursor to advancing other rights. Nazila Ghanea is Professor of International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford, Director of the MSc in international human rights law, Governing Body Fellow at Kellogg College, Oxford and Senior Teaching Fellow at New College, Oxford. She was appointed UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief in August 2022. She has also held senior management positions at the University of Oxford and was previously a visiting fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre. She served as a member of the OSCE Panel of Experts on Freedom of Religion or Belief (2012-2019). Her OUP law monograph on freedom of religion or belief (with Heiner Bielefeldt and Michael Wiener) was awarded the Senior Alberigo Prize by the European Academy of Religion and she was awarded the Religious Liberty Prize by Notre Dame University in 2024. She has published widely in international human rights law and serves on the Editorial Board for the Oxford Journal of Law and Religion and the Cambridge Ecclesiastical Law Journal. The Friday Lunchtime Lecture series is kindly supported by Cambridge University Press & Assessment .


Read more at: Friday Lecture: 'State Immunity: Theory and Practice' - Hussein Haeri KC is a Partner at Withers

Friday Lecture: 'State Immunity: Theory and Practice' - Hussein Haeri KC is a Partner at Withers

There is a sandwich lunch at 12.30 pm in the Old Library at the Centre. All lecture attendees welcome. Summary: This lecture will explore the parameters of State immunity at the international level and as reflected in different national legal systems (including England & Wales, the United States and others). It will include an overview of foundational and more recent jurisprudence in international and domestic courts, and will give particular focus to select aspects of State immunity in the context of enforcement against State assets. Hussein Haeri KC is a Partner at Withers in London and Head of the firm's Public International Law Group. He is a King's Counsel and was the only Solicitor Advocate to take Silk in 2024. Hussein has extensive experience as counsel and advocate on international dispute resolution matters for almost 20 years in London, Paris and New York, including before the ICJ, ITLOS, under ICSID and UNCITRAL arbitration rules and in national courts. He has been recognised for many years by the major legal directories including Chambers & Partners, which refers to him as an "outstanding lawyer", and Legal 500 which states that "he combines huge intellectual powers with great client handling". He is a Partner Fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, a Senior Fellow at SOAS in London and has lectured at various other universities including the University of Oxford, Sciences Po in Paris and Roma Tre University in Rome. The Friday Lunchtime Lecture series is kindly supported by Cambridge University Press & Assessment .