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Tag: International Court of Justice (ICJ)

Looking Forward: What Can Courts Do and When

Professor Laurie Blank and Professor Daphné Richemond-Barak’s End of War Project motivates us to think in new ways about the institutions and processes that...

Courts in Wartime: A Level Playing Field for Peace

The question of whether international courts can play a role in ending wars has become more pressing than ever as the rules-based international order...

Symposium: Updated Commentary on the Fourth Geneva Convention

Just Security, in collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and EJIL:Talk!, presents this joint symposium on the ICRC’s recently updated...

Suspend Your Judgment? The Role of International Courts in Ending Wars

Wars in the Era of Multiple International Adjudication The End of War Project – in one of whose workshops I was fortunate to participate –...

Proving Genocide: Party Presentation

The International Court of Justice opened its public hearings this week in Gambia v. Myanmar. The Gambia maintained its consistent position that Myanmar committed...

Elements of Genocide: Intent to Kill

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) will soon hold public hearings in the case brought by the Gambia against Myanmar. The case involves serious...

A U.S.-Russia-China Entente? The Unmaking of the Sovereignty System via the Western Sahara

The United Nations Charter promised a world in which sovereignty would shield states from conquest, partition, and protectorates. Today, that sovereignty system is being...