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The call for  papers or posters for the ESIL Vienna Conference on 4-6 September 2014 includes:

Agora 4: International Law and Economics 

‘Law and economics’ has become an established branch of interdisciplinary research. Many fields of the law have been analyzed from a ‘law and economics’ perspective (assuming rational behaviour and using economic tools) and also from a ‘behavioural law and economics’ perspective (a joint enterprise between economists and psychologists). However, international law appears to have been analyzed to a lesser extent although it is an especially interesting topic due to the missing centralized enforcement power. It thus appears worthwhile to investigate whether ‘(behavioural) law and economics’ approaches could be applied more widely to core issues of international law ranging from treaty negotiation to treaty compliance, the development of customary law, the design of international institutions, international dispute settlement, and so on.

This agora welcomes all contributions on international law using a (behavioural) economics approach, including empirical studies on international law.

The deadline for proposals for papers or posters is 15 January 2014.

La Asociación Brasileña de Derecho Internacional (ABDI) y el Núcleo de Estudios en Tribunales Internacionales de la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de São Paulo (USP), tienen el honor de invitarles al Cuarto Seminario Brasileño sobre Cortes y Tribunales Internacionales, que tendrá lugar los días 18 y 19 de noviembre en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de São Paulo (USP), Largo São Francisco, São Paulo, Brasil. Más información en www.netiusp.org o escribiendo al correo: netiusp@gmail.com.

La Revista Electrónica Cordobesa de Derecho Internacional Público (RECORDIP) invita a presentar trabajos de doctrina en los que se analicen aspectos teóricos o comentarios a fallos de temas de derecho internacional público y derecho de la integración y/o comunitario. Los artículos pueden ser presentados en español, inglés o portugués. La Revista publica trabajos de académicos, profesionales y estudiantes. La fecha límite para la presentación es el 20 de diciembre de 2013 a fin de ser publicados en el Volumen 1, n° 2 (2013) de la Revista.  Los trabajos serán revisados por el Comité editorial de la Revista y remitidos para arbitraje. Los artículos deben ser enviados a sommeregov@yahoo.com.ar.

 

Richard Teschner, Kleine Stadt, 1903. Österreichische Galerie Belvedere

The call for  papers or posters for the ESIL Vienna Conference on 4-6 September 2014 includes:

Agora 3: Trade and Investment between International and European Law

Trade and investment are core issues at the crossroads of international and European law. The EU has gradually expanded its trade competences and succeeded into its member states’ position in global trade arrangements like the GATT and other WTO agreements. Most recently, the take-over of member state powers in the field of concluding investment treaties with third parties has led to contested new external powers of the EU. Trade and investment issues are meanwhile litigated before a multiplicity of fora, such as the WTO dispute settlement system, regional trade agreements, the Court of Justice of the EU, investment arbitration tribunals as well as national courts. Host states invoke EU law as a defence in investment cases and traders try to rely on international law before regional and national courts.

This agora will analyze the frictions and bridges between the global and the regional, between international and European law, in regulating common problems at different levels. It will also focus on the role of international law in the European legal order addressing trade and investment disputes and vice versa.

The deadline for proposals for papers or posters is 15 January 2014.

Gustave Klimt, Bauerngarten mit Sonnenblumen 1906. Österreichische Galerie Belvedere

The call for  papers or posters for the ESIL Vienna Conference on 4-6 September 2014 includes:

Agora 2: National Law as a Generator of International Law 

 

 National law, both statutory and case-law, can influence international law in many ways. National law may serve as a template for treaties or lead to the development of customary law and, most importantly, national law may evidence general principles of law. Classic examples are the impact of the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act on the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention or the Truman Proclamation’s influence on the customary international law of the continental shelf. A particularly fascinating role is played by domestic courts; their jurisprudence may take on a special law-making role as relevant state practice and, often at the same time, as opinio iuris evident in many immunity and extraterritorial jurisdiction cases.

This agora will address the various ways that national law and jurisprudence influence international law. What is the particular role of domestic courts? Does this role depend on national traditions? Is it shaped by transnational judicial dialogue or are courts in different states acting as isolated agents? How have international courts incorporated national law or national law concepts in their reasoning? How do international courts and tribunals ‘select’ the domestic case law on a particular matter?

The deadline for proposals for papers or posters is 15 January 2014.

Gustav Klimt, Allee im Park vor Schloß Kammer 1912. Österreichische Galerie Belvedere

The call for  papers or posters for the ESIL Vienna Conference on 4-6 September 2014 includes:

Agora 1: International Law as a Generator of National Law 

International law has greatly expanded. Today, almost all spheres of life regulated by law  are to some extent pre-determined by international law. Often international law even inspires national legislation that would otherwise possibly not exist at all. In some areas international law may substitute for domestic law. Global Law, Global Governance,  Global Administrative Law and International Public Authority discourses debate whether international law or some modification of international law is likely to make domestic law superfluous in some areas or whether it may rather generate more domestic law. This agora is intended to focus on the role of international law in the domestic sphere. What are the quantitative and qualitative features of the influence of international law at the national level? Are the traditional concepts of incorporation/application still adequate? Are states still able to mediate and control the impact of international law? Is domestic social change through international legislation possible? Is it desirable?

The deadline for proposals for papers or posters is 15 January 2014.

Hay un estudio que dice que la  gran mayoría de los judíos tiene algún ancestro entre los expulsados de España en 1492. ¿Todos tendrían derecho a pedir la nacionalidad española según la promesa del Gobierno español de otorgar la nacionalidad a los que acrediten ser descendientes de los expulsados en 1492? ¿Sólo los que se identifican como sefardíes? ¿Hay que saber hablar sefardí? Al parecer sólo habría unos 5 mil solicitantes a la espera de que se concrete el método por el que se les otorgaría la nacionalidad española. A mí me parece una medida espléndida. En todo caso, habrá que conocer cuáles son los requisitos específicos para que se concrete esta promesa.

Gustav Klimt, Kuss, 1907/1908 Österreichische Galerie Belvedere

The call for papers and posters for the ESIL Vienna Conference on 4-6 September 2014 has been published. The programme is magnificent and you can send proposals for papers or posters until 15 January 2014.

“INTERNATIONAL LAW AND …”
Boundaries of International Law and Bridges to Other Fields and Disciplines

International law has long been influenced by other fields of law and other disciplines and this conference will explore these influences and the way that they are intertwined. International law may regulate, mostly through treaties, other fields of law such as commercial, employment, family or environmental law; the use of international law is very different in each of these fields and international lawyers may be criminal lawyers, investment arbitrators or administrative law specialists while still considering themselves international lawyers. At the same time, international law needs to be understood in a broader context. The fluctuating content of international law – as a result of its decentralized norm-making process – and the various compliance and enforcement structures – due to the lack or weakness of centralized policing institutions – often require meta-legal reasoning when it comes to explaining the normative quality of international law and to understanding what the law is and why it should be followed. These trends have increased recently and threatened international law with fragmentation through over-specialization. In order to see the whole picture, international lawyers need to understand how international law is distinguished from and linked to other fields and disciplines.
The 2014 ESIL conference in Vienna will explore these interconnections and will also look at whether the boundaries of international law have been crossed, and in what ways. The title ‘International Law and …’ indicates that the focus is both on the interplay between international law and other fields of law and between international law and other disciplines.

The papers and posters will discuss international law and history, feminism, literature, films, sports, technology, et cetera.

The third issue of the fourth volume of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement publishes a series of articles on the judicial practice of the International Court of Justice in the year 2012. The table of contents includes a juicy editorial by Tom Grant and a series of studies by Andrea Bianchi,  Annemarieke Vermeer-Künzli , Andreas Zimmermann, Andre Nollkaemper, Sean Murphy, Geir Ulfstein, and myself. The latest American Journal of International Law contains the analysis of  the 2012 judicial activity of the Court by Jacob Katz Cogan, the author of the useful ILR blog.

Foto: Kent Smith/Showtime

Homeland tiene un trasfondo lleno de reglas de derecho internacional. Por ejemplo, un aspecto central de la serie es un ataque con drones en Iraq, que mata al hijo del terrorista Abu Nazir y casi le cuesta la vida al protagonista Nicholas Brody. En la serie está presente siempre la tensión entre la expansión de las prerrogativas para la lucha contra el terrorismo y la protección de los derechos humanos, una tensión que define nuestra época con nitidez desde septiembre de 2001. En el cuarto capítulo de la tercera temporada la serie se traslada a Suramérica, porque el protagonista se encuentra atrapado en un edificio abandonado de Caracas, Venezuela, conocido como la Torre de David, al que el periodista John Lee Anderson le dedicó un ensayo en The New Yorker titulado ‘Slumlord‘, que ahora compara con los datos del capítulo de Homeland en su post ‘The Real Tower of David‘ y podrán corroborar quienes conocen esa parte de la ciudad. La ficción es atrayente, aunque la música que suena en el edificio, que proviene de una mezquita cercana en la serie de televisión, no resulta nada creíble.