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Public Law, Public
THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs | Völkerrechtsblog. Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. Six Paid Traineeships WHAT DOES THE VAVŘIČKA JUDGEMENT TELL US ABOUT THE On the 8th of April, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (‘the Court’) issued its widely-anticipated judgement on Vavřička and others v. the Czech Republic shedding some light on its view on mandatory vaccinations. As public discussions on COVID-19 vaccines multiply and some States waveringly lean towards compulsory vaccinations policies, the Court’s judgement could CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SUÉ GONZÁLEZ HAUCK ARCHIVES Sué González Hauck is a legal trainee (Rechtsreferendarin) in Frankfurt am Main. She is an editor at Völkerrechtsblog. Symposium. The role of the ILC. The outside keeps creeping in: On the impossibility of engaging in purely doctrinal scholarship. 23.02.2021. Sué González Hauck. Danae Azaria’s article is a perfect example ofa specific
FREE SPEECH IN THE AGE OF ONLINE CONTENT MODERATION Indeed, in order to avoid interferences with fundamental rights, especially the right to free speech, the regulation of content moderation should not lead to an obligation of online platforms to generally monitor online content. Moreover, content moderation procedures should be explained to users in a transparent anduser-friendly way.
VÖLKERRECHTSLUNCH
Völkerrechtslunch. Beim „Völkerrechtslunch“ handelt sich um ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Völkerrechtsblogs, des Leibniz-Institutes für Medienforschung / Hans-Bredow-Institut , des Max-Planck-Institutes für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, sowie des Humboldt-Institutes für Internet undGesellschaft.
HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD Jasper Mührel All that Glitters Is Not Gold: The German Constitutional Court’s Climate Ruling and the Protection of Persons Beyond German Territory Against Climate Change Impacts , Völkerrechtsblog, 03.05.2021, doi: 10.17176/20210503-111345-0. Jasper Mührel is a doctoral candidate and research assistant at the Chair ofPublic Law, Public
THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs | Völkerrechtsblog. Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. Six Paid Traineeships WHAT DOES THE VAVŘIČKA JUDGEMENT TELL US ABOUT THE On the 8th of April, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (‘the Court’) issued its widely-anticipated judgement on Vavřička and others v. the Czech Republic shedding some light on its view on mandatory vaccinations. As public discussions on COVID-19 vaccines multiply and some States waveringly lean towards compulsory vaccinations policies, the Court’s judgement could CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SUÉ GONZÁLEZ HAUCK ARCHIVES Sué González Hauck is a legal trainee (Rechtsreferendarin) in Frankfurt am Main. She is an editor at Völkerrechtsblog. Symposium. The role of the ILC. The outside keeps creeping in: On the impossibility of engaging in purely doctrinal scholarship. 23.02.2021. Sué González Hauck. Danae Azaria’s article is a perfect example ofa specific
FREE SPEECH IN THE AGE OF ONLINE CONTENT MODERATION Indeed, in order to avoid interferences with fundamental rights, especially the right to free speech, the regulation of content moderation should not lead to an obligation of online platforms to generally monitor online content. Moreover, content moderation procedures should be explained to users in a transparent anduser-friendly way.
VÖLKERRECHTSLUNCH
Völkerrechtslunch. Beim „Völkerrechtslunch“ handelt sich um ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Völkerrechtsblogs, des Leibniz-Institutes für Medienforschung / Hans-Bredow-Institut , des Max-Planck-Institutes für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, sowie des Humboldt-Institutes für Internet undGesellschaft.
DESIGNING REWARDS
Cristiane Lucena Carneiro is an Associate Professor at the International Relations Institute of University of Sao Paulo. She holds a Ph.D. in Politics (New York University), an M.A. in Political Science and a B.A. in Law (Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil).A BURDEN TO SHARE
He holds a Ph.D. in Law (Leiden University, 2014), an LL.B. (Utrecht University, 2005), and a B.A. and M.A. in Philosophy (Leiden University, 2001 and 2003). His publications are focused on topics in the fields of philosophy and law. Cite as: Jasper Doomen, “A burden to share. The need to acknowledge the complexity of member statedifferences
DON’T SETTLE FOR LESS Nora Jauer Justine Batura Don’t Settle For Less: Thoughts on the Current Draft German Supply Chain Act, Völkerrechtsblog, 22.04.2021, doi: 10.17176/20210422-100928-0. Nora Jauer is a PhD candidate and research associate at the University of Potsdam. She studied law in Potsdam and Montpellier and her current research focuses on HumanRights
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
REPARATION AND JUDICIAL DISCRETION In Rewarding in International Law, Professor Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek argue that rewards are an effective means to induce State compliance with treaty law. Rewarding is inscribed in the analytical framework of ‘compliance theory’, a field concerning the reasons ‘why states fulfil their international obligations the design and operation of possible enforcement mechanismsREWARDING IN EU LAW
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), as a principle voice of the EU legal order, has long ago severed the link between EU law and international law by pursuing the so-called constitutionalization thesis on the basis of which EU law has been converted into an autonomous legal order with its own constitutional charter.As EU law has thus been widely theorized and practiced asBEYOND SHAMING
In human rights law, shame is ubiquitous. ‘Naming and shaming’ has become the core tactic of human rights advocacy and the modus operandi of international NGOs such as Amnesty International. More subconsciously, shame and guilt over our own privilege in a highly unequal and unjust world brought many of us to study human rights inthe first place.
REWARDING COMPLIANCE In their recent article, Rewarding in International Law, Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek provide a novel typology of incentives that exist to promote compliance with international law, arguing that positive incentives – rewards – are both more prevalent and more useful than the existing literature on compliance leads one to think. Drawing on behavioural insights from psychology, political BEYOND JAPAN’S DECISION On March 11, 2011, the strongest earthquake recorded in Japan and an ensuing tsunami killed nearly 19.500 people and destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station releasing radioactive materials over a large area. Ten years later, Fukushima is once again making headlines as part of the radioactively contaminated cooling water is to be discharged into the sea (see here, here, here and A PROBLEM BIGGER THAN QATAR With the European soccer Championship beginning this Friday, discussions regarding the human rights situations of host states rose once again, specifically concerning Azerbaijan’s oppression of the press and alleged war crimes.Similarly, back in March the protests of several European national football teams during the qualifications for the FIFA World Cup 2022 have shone light on the human HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD Jasper Mührel All that Glitters Is Not Gold: The German Constitutional Court’s Climate Ruling and the Protection of Persons Beyond German Territory Against Climate Change Impacts , Völkerrechtsblog, 03.05.2021, doi: 10.17176/20210503-111345-0. Jasper Mührel is a doctoral candidate and research assistant at the Chair ofPublic Law, Public
THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs | Völkerrechtsblog. Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. Six Paid Traineeships TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
WHAT DOES THE VAVŘIČKA JUDGEMENT TELL US ABOUT THE On the 8th of April, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (‘the Court’) issued its widely-anticipated judgement on Vavřička and others v. the Czech Republic shedding some light on its view on mandatory vaccinations. As public discussions on COVID-19 vaccines multiply and some States waveringly lean towards compulsory vaccinations policies, the Court’s judgement could CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is FREE SPEECH IN THE AGE OF ONLINE CONTENT MODERATION Indeed, in order to avoid interferences with fundamental rights, especially the right to free speech, the regulation of content moderation should not lead to an obligation of online platforms to generally monitor online content. Moreover, content moderation procedures should be explained to users in a transparent anduser-friendly way.
VÖLKERRECHTSLUNCH
Völkerrechtslunch. Beim „Völkerrechtslunch“ handelt sich um ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Völkerrechtsblogs, des Leibniz-Institutes für Medienforschung / Hans-Bredow-Institut , des Max-Planck-Institutes für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, sowie des Humboldt-Institutes für Internet undGesellschaft.
HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD Jasper Mührel All that Glitters Is Not Gold: The German Constitutional Court’s Climate Ruling and the Protection of Persons Beyond German Territory Against Climate Change Impacts , Völkerrechtsblog, 03.05.2021, doi: 10.17176/20210503-111345-0. Jasper Mührel is a doctoral candidate and research assistant at the Chair ofPublic Law, Public
THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs | Völkerrechtsblog. Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. Six Paid Traineeships TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
WHAT DOES THE VAVŘIČKA JUDGEMENT TELL US ABOUT THE On the 8th of April, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (‘the Court’) issued its widely-anticipated judgement on Vavřička and others v. the Czech Republic shedding some light on its view on mandatory vaccinations. As public discussions on COVID-19 vaccines multiply and some States waveringly lean towards compulsory vaccinations policies, the Court’s judgement could CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is FREE SPEECH IN THE AGE OF ONLINE CONTENT MODERATION Indeed, in order to avoid interferences with fundamental rights, especially the right to free speech, the regulation of content moderation should not lead to an obligation of online platforms to generally monitor online content. Moreover, content moderation procedures should be explained to users in a transparent anduser-friendly way.
VÖLKERRECHTSLUNCH
Völkerrechtslunch. Beim „Völkerrechtslunch“ handelt sich um ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Völkerrechtsblogs, des Leibniz-Institutes für Medienforschung / Hans-Bredow-Institut , des Max-Planck-Institutes für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, sowie des Humboldt-Institutes für Internet undGesellschaft.
A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? 08.12.2020. In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filledwith
DON’T SETTLE FOR LESS Nora Jauer Justine Batura Don’t Settle For Less: Thoughts on the Current Draft German Supply Chain Act, Völkerrechtsblog, 22.04.2021, doi: 10.17176/20210422-100928-0. Nora Jauer is a PhD candidate and research associate at the University of Potsdam. She studied law in Potsdam and Montpellier and her current research focuses on HumanRights
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
REWARDING IN EU LAW
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), as a principle voice of the EU legal order, has long ago severed the link between EU law and international law by pursuing the so-called constitutionalization thesis on the basis of which EU law has been converted into an autonomous legal order with its own constitutional charter.As EU law has thus been widely theorized and practiced as REPARATION AND JUDICIAL DISCRETION In Rewarding in International Law, Professor Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek argue that rewards are an effective means to induce State compliance with treaty law. Rewarding is inscribed in the analytical framework of ‘compliance theory’, a field concerning the reasons ‘why states fulfil their international obligations the design and operation of possible enforcement mechanisms REWARDING COMPLIANCE In their recent article, Rewarding in International Law, Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek provide a novel typology of incentives that exist to promote compliance with international law, arguing that positive incentives – rewards – are both more prevalent and more useful than the existing literature on compliance leads one to think. Drawing on behavioural insights from psychology, politicalBEYOND SHAMING
In human rights law, shame is ubiquitous. ‘Naming and shaming’ has become the core tactic of human rights advocacy and the modus operandi of international NGOs such as Amnesty International. More subconsciously, shame and guilt over our own privilege in a highly unequal and unjust world brought many of us to study human rights inthe first place.
BEYOND JAPAN’S DECISION On March 11, 2011, the strongest earthquake recorded in Japan and an ensuing tsunami killed nearly 19.500 people and destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station releasing radioactive materials over a large area. Ten years later, Fukushima is once again making headlines as part of the radioactively contaminated cooling water is to be discharged into the sea (see here, here, here and FROM STICKS TO CARROTS? A new article on how States could be encouraged to comply with international law promises to revolutionize how we think about incentives in international relations. #6 (DES-)INFORMATION Erik Tuchtfeld is a Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. He is an editor atVölkerrechtsblog.
HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. International Campus Ambassador Program. Deadline: no deadline. The political Pipeline has come up with its "International Campus Ambassador Program" for law studentsaround the globe!
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? 08.12.2020. In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filledwith
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
THE GOVERNANCE OF DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN INTERNATIONAL The governance of disease outbreaks in international health law. From Ebola to COVID-19 (Part I) 13.07.2020. A deadly virus starts spreading in several communities. Reports are issued warning of the potential fallout if no action is taken. Yet both national authorities, as well as the WHO, the United Nations as such, and the international HARMONY IN THE CHINESE JUST WAR TRADITION One of the fundamental characteristics of international humanitarian law (IHL) is the separation between jus ad bellum and jus in bello, which was originally devised in the West, subsequent to the decline of its just war tradition in legal practice. China has adopted a philosophically different approach to the relationship between these two branches of law, and further, a distinctive moral CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SHPETIM BAJRAMI ARCHIVES Shpetim Bajrami Archives | Völkerrechtsblog. Shpetim Bajrami. Article. Identifying customary international law from the ivory tower? 22.07.2019. Shpetim Bajrami. The discussion about the right of self-defence of states against non-state actors is in flux. Among the reasons for that could be new types of terrorism and conflicts whichhave
HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. International Campus Ambassador Program. Deadline: no deadline. The political Pipeline has come up with its "International Campus Ambassador Program" for law studentsaround the globe!
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? 08.12.2020. In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filledwith
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
THE GOVERNANCE OF DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN INTERNATIONAL The governance of disease outbreaks in international health law. From Ebola to COVID-19 (Part I) 13.07.2020. A deadly virus starts spreading in several communities. Reports are issued warning of the potential fallout if no action is taken. Yet both national authorities, as well as the WHO, the United Nations as such, and the international HARMONY IN THE CHINESE JUST WAR TRADITION One of the fundamental characteristics of international humanitarian law (IHL) is the separation between jus ad bellum and jus in bello, which was originally devised in the West, subsequent to the decline of its just war tradition in legal practice. China has adopted a philosophically different approach to the relationship between these two branches of law, and further, a distinctive moral CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SHPETIM BAJRAMI ARCHIVES Shpetim Bajrami Archives | Völkerrechtsblog. Shpetim Bajrami. Article. Identifying customary international law from the ivory tower? 22.07.2019. Shpetim Bajrami. The discussion about the right of self-defence of states against non-state actors is in flux. Among the reasons for that could be new types of terrorism and conflicts whichhave
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the decision is backed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (), the US, and nuclear scientists reassuring the “minimal impact” of the planned discharge, the decision was met with DISCOURSES OF POWER AND NORMATIVITY Hendrik Simon is Lecturer at Goethe University Frankfurt and Research Associate at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt. Among his main publications is ‘The Myth of Liberum Ius ad Bellum. Justifying War in 19th-Century Legal Theory and Political Practice’, in The European Journal of International Law (2018).He is an editor atVölkerrechtsblog.
REWARDING COMPLIANCE In their recent article, Rewarding in International Law, Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek provide a novel typology of incentives that exist to promote compliance with international law, arguing that positive incentives – rewards – are both more prevalent and more useful than the existing literature on compliance leads one to think. Drawing on behavioural insights from psychology, political THE FUTURE OF “CLIMATE REFUGEES” IN INTERNATIONAL LAW The issue of “climate refugees” has attracted scholarly attention for over a decade.The historic ruling of the Human Rights Committee (‘HRCtee’) in Ioane Teitiota v. New Zealand further increased academic interest in the matter and theincreasing numbers of persons displaced by climate-related events underscore the importance of this topic.. On 6 th May 2021, we had the pleasure to host A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filled with migrants as they enter the territorial waters of a state and RETHINKING THE JUSTIFICATION OF WAR The Justification of War and International Order – From Past to Present, Edited by Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon (OUP 2021); Jacket image: Ingrid Krüger, Aquarelle, Tübingen 2002. REWARDING IN INTERNATIONAL LAW This Symposiums aims to engage with the work of Anne van Aaken (University of Hamburg) and Betül Simsek (University of Hamburg) in their recently published article ‘Rewarding in International Law’. The article focuses on rewards as an effective incentive for States to comply with international law and suggests that more use be made ofthis tool.
BIG BROTHER WATCH V. UK On 25 May 2021, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights issued a landmark ruling on the compatibility of systems of mass surveillance with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the essential elements of which were first brought to public light by the revelations of whistleblower Edward Snowden in 2013.. The judgment in the case brought against the United #6 (DES-)INFORMATION Erik Tuchtfeld is a Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. He is an editor atVölkerrechtsblog.
ONE POSITION AS RESEARCH AND TEACHING ASSISTANT (30H/WEEK GZ A 0064/1-2021 The Department of Public Law, International and European Law is offering the position of a Research and teaching assistant (doctoral candidate – Application group B1; the minimum monthly salary for this position is € 2,228.60 – 14 times per year – and may be increased on the basis of the collective bargaining agreement by taking into account previous experience HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. International Campus Ambassador Program. Deadline: no deadline. The political Pipeline has come up with its "International Campus Ambassador Program" for law studentsaround the globe!
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? 08.12.2020. In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filledwith
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
THE GOVERNANCE OF DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN INTERNATIONAL The governance of disease outbreaks in international health law. From Ebola to COVID-19 (Part I) 13.07.2020. A deadly virus starts spreading in several communities. Reports are issued warning of the potential fallout if no action is taken. Yet both national authorities, as well as the WHO, the United Nations as such, and the international HARMONY IN THE CHINESE JUST WAR TRADITION One of the fundamental characteristics of international humanitarian law (IHL) is the separation between jus ad bellum and jus in bello, which was originally devised in the West, subsequent to the decline of its just war tradition in legal practice. China has adopted a philosophically different approach to the relationship between these two branches of law, and further, a distinctive moral CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SHPETIM BAJRAMI ARCHIVES Shpetim Bajrami Archives | Völkerrechtsblog. Shpetim Bajrami. Article. Identifying customary international law from the ivory tower? 22.07.2019. Shpetim Bajrami. The discussion about the right of self-defence of states against non-state actors is in flux. Among the reasons for that could be new types of terrorism and conflicts whichhave
HOME | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOGISABEL LISCHEWSKIGRAB ME IF YOU CANLILIANA LYRA JUBILUTLAYLA KRISTINA JABERUNITED NATIONS Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read more. Editor of the week. Christian Pogies. Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member JOBS | VÖLKERRECHTSBLOG Jobs. Here you find recent job offers. If you would like to advertise your job offer, please get in touch via newsletter@voelkerrechtsblog.org. International Campus Ambassador Program. Deadline: no deadline. The political Pipeline has come up with its "International Campus Ambassador Program" for law studentsaround the globe!
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? A Case of MOX Plant 2.0 in the Pacific? South Korea Contemplates Challenging Japan’s Fukushima Wastewater Decision. 06.05.2021. On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the THE RIGHT TO ABORTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN Abortion bans are back in Vogue!Nearly 165 years after the first massive demonstration on women’s rights, discussions on the extent to which interference with female bodies falls within States’ margin of appreciation (‘MoA’) remain apropos. Indeed, the recent Polish near-absolute abortion ban has revived the debate on the existence of a foetus’ right to life and balancing it with A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? 08.12.2020. In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filledwith
TWO OPPOSING COMMITMENTS? 29.06.2020. Federica Cittadino’s book examines the tension that underpins the relationship between two key commitments undertaken by the international community, namely the commitment to protect indigenous people’s rights and the commitment to protect biodiversity. This book becomes especially relevant at a time when weare frequently
THE GOVERNANCE OF DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN INTERNATIONAL The governance of disease outbreaks in international health law. From Ebola to COVID-19 (Part I) 13.07.2020. A deadly virus starts spreading in several communities. Reports are issued warning of the potential fallout if no action is taken. Yet both national authorities, as well as the WHO, the United Nations as such, and the international HARMONY IN THE CHINESE JUST WAR TRADITION One of the fundamental characteristics of international humanitarian law (IHL) is the separation between jus ad bellum and jus in bello, which was originally devised in the West, subsequent to the decline of its just war tradition in legal practice. China has adopted a philosophically different approach to the relationship between these two branches of law, and further, a distinctive moral CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION: A TRULY "GLOBAL" LEGAL In addition, heritage protection is also a ‘global’ problem in the truest sense: it is not only a matter for States, as the orthodox point of departure within international law dictates. Precisely because of its close connection to culture, an integral element of heritage protection is SHPETIM BAJRAMI ARCHIVES Shpetim Bajrami Archives | Völkerrechtsblog. Shpetim Bajrami. Article. Identifying customary international law from the ivory tower? 22.07.2019. Shpetim Bajrami. The discussion about the right of self-defence of states against non-state actors is in flux. Among the reasons for that could be new types of terrorism and conflicts whichhave
A CASE OF MOX PLANT 2.0 IN THE PACIFIC? On 13 April 2021, the Japanese government formally authorised the release of 1.25 million tons of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean. While the decision is backed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (), the US, and nuclear scientists reassuring the “minimal impact” of the planned discharge, the decision was met with DISCOURSES OF POWER AND NORMATIVITY Hendrik Simon is Lecturer at Goethe University Frankfurt and Research Associate at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt. Among his main publications is ‘The Myth of Liberum Ius ad Bellum. Justifying War in 19th-Century Legal Theory and Political Practice’, in The European Journal of International Law (2018).He is an editor atVölkerrechtsblog.
REWARDING IN INTERNATIONAL LAW This Symposiums aims to engage with the work of Anne van Aaken (University of Hamburg) and Betül Simsek (University of Hamburg) in their recently published article ‘Rewarding in International Law’. The article focuses on rewards as an effective incentive for States to comply with international law and suggests that more use be made ofthis tool.
RETHINKING THE JUSTIFICATION OF WAR The Justification of War and International Order – From Past to Present, Edited by Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon (OUP 2021); Jacket image: Ingrid Krüger, Aquarelle, Tübingen 2002. A PUSHBACK AGAINST INTERNATIONAL LAW? In late October, an international group of investigative journalists released a detailed report about the involvement of Frontex, the European border security agency, in so-called pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Though not a legal term, ‘pushbacks’ refer to the highly controversial practice of intercepting vessels filled with migrants as they enter the territorial waters of a state and REWARDING COMPLIANCE In their recent article, Rewarding in International Law, Anne van Aaken and Betül Simsek provide a novel typology of incentives that exist to promote compliance with international law, arguing that positive incentives – rewards – are both more prevalent and more useful than the existing literature on compliance leads one to think. Drawing on behavioural insights from psychology, political THE FUTURE OF “CLIMATE REFUGEES” IN INTERNATIONAL LAW The issue of “climate refugees” has attracted scholarly attention for over a decade.The historic ruling of the Human Rights Committee (‘HRCtee’) in Ioane Teitiota v. New Zealand further increased academic interest in the matter and theincreasing numbers of persons displaced by climate-related events underscore the importance of this topic.. On 6 th May 2021, we had the pleasure to host BIG BROTHER WATCH V. UK On 25 May 2021, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights issued a landmark ruling on the compatibility of systems of mass surveillance with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the essential elements of which were first brought to public light by the revelations of whistleblower Edward Snowden in 2013.. The judgment in the case brought against the United #6 (DES-)INFORMATION Erik Tuchtfeld is a Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. He is an editor atVölkerrechtsblog.
ONE POSITION AS RESEARCH AND TEACHING ASSISTANT (30H/WEEK GZ A 0064/1-2021 The Department of Public Law, International and European Law is offering the position of a Research and teaching assistant (doctoral candidate – Application group B1; the minimum monthly salary for this position is € 2,228.60 – 14 times per year – and may be increased on the basis of the collective bargaining agreement by taking into account previous experience* Articles
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THE FUTURE OF “CLIMATE REFUGEES” IN INTERNATIONAL LAW05.06.2021
Spyridoula Katsoni Jan-Phillip Graf The issue of “climate refugees” has attracted scholarly attention for over a decade. The historic ruling of the Human Rights Committee (‘HRCtee’) in Ioane Teitiota v. New Zealand further increased...Read more
* #Ö: Our own news
EDITORIAL #6: ON SILENCE01.06.2021
Philipp Eschenhagen
As so frequently in the past, the world had its eyes turned towards the Middle East where the worst fighting in years erupted between Israelis and Palestinians in May 2021....Read more
* Book Review
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* The Justification of War and International Order WAR AND INTERNATIONAL ORDER: THE OLD AND THE NEW31.05.2021
Claire Vergerio
Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon’s edited book on The Justification of War and International Order (2021) is a rich volume that brings together scholars from across international law, political theory, history, and international...Read more
* Book Review
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* The Justification of War and International Order WAR! WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR?31.05.2021
Sué González Hauck Sebastian Spitra Nesa Zimmermann ‘The history of war is also a history of its justification’ (p. 3) – this is the momentous starting point of the volume on The Justification of War and International...Read more
* Article
BIG BROTHER WATCH V. UK04.06.2021
Massimo Frigo
On 25 May 2021, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights issued a landmark ruling on the compatibility of systems of mass surveillance with the European Convention...Read more
* Book Review
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* The Justification of War and International Order DISCOURSES OF POWER AND NORMATIVITY04.06.2021
Lothar Brock Hendrik Simon We would like to thank the contributors as well as the editorial team at Völkerrechtsblog, and particularly Sué González Hauck, for putting together this thought-provoking symposium on “TheJustification of...
Read more
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* The Justification of War and International Order RETHINKING THE JUSTIFICATION OF WAR03.06.2021
Wouter Werner
A good book makes you rethink. It alerts you to things you didn’t know. It offers new ways of looking at what you already knew – or thought you knew....Read more
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* The Justification of War and International Order ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS02.06.2021
Wouter De Rycke
Few legal disciplines seem to manifest such a consistently discouraging discrepancy between the law in the books and the law in action as the international laws regulating the use of...Read more
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* 70 Years of UNHCR and Refugee Convention FROM STATE PETITIONS TO PROTECTION SPACE02.06.2021
Maja Janmyr
Although UNHCR has a mandatory duty to promote accession to the 1951 Refugee Convention, UNHCR appears to increasingly take the back seat when it comes to petitioning for state accession....Read more
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* The Justification of War and International Order WE’RE (NOT) TALKIN’ BOUT A REVOLUTION01.06.2021
Parvathi Menon
In a stupendous effort, Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon have put together a volume that ranges widely in perspectives and ‘traditions of justification’ (p. 8). Their book, ‘The Justification of...Read more
* #Ö: Our own news
EDITORIAL #6: ON SILENCE01.06.2021
Philipp Eschenhagen
As so frequently in the past, the world had its eyes turned towards the Middle East where the worst fighting in years erupted between Israelis and Palestinians in May 2021....Read more
* Book Review
* Symposium
* The Justification of War and International Order WAR AND INTERNATIONAL ORDER: THE OLD AND THE NEW31.05.2021
Claire Vergerio
Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon’s edited book on The Justification of War and International Order (2021) is a rich volume that brings together scholars from across international law, political theory, history, and international...Read more
* Book Review
* Symposium
* The Justification of War and International Order WAR! WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR?31.05.2021
Sué González Hauck Sebastian Spitra Nesa Zimmermann ‘The history of war is also a history of its justification’ (p. 3) – this is the momentous starting point of the volume on The Justification of War and International...Read more
* Article
BIG BROTHER WATCH V. UK04.06.2021
Massimo Frigo
On 25 May 2021, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights issued a landmark ruling on the compatibility of systems of mass surveillance with the European Convention...Read more
* Book Review
* Symposium
* The Justification of War and International Order DISCOURSES OF POWER AND NORMATIVITY04.06.2021
Lothar Brock Hendrik Simon We would like to thank the contributors as well as the editorial team at Völkerrechtsblog, and particularly Sué González Hauck, for putting together this thought-provoking symposium on “TheJustification of...
Read more
* Book Review
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* The Justification of War and International Order RETHINKING THE JUSTIFICATION OF WAR03.06.2021
Wouter Werner
A good book makes you rethink. It alerts you to things you didn’t know. It offers new ways of looking at what you already knew – or thought you knew....Read more
About the Blog
Völkerrechtsblog is a peer-reviewed academic blog on all matters of public international law and international legal thought. We welcome contributions from all around the globe on these topics. Read moreEditor of the week
Christian Pogies
Christian is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and a member of the research project “Methods of the history of global law”.
His fields of research include the history and normative foundations of the modern law of the sea, processes of norm-genesis in international law and comparative international law.Services
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LIVESTREAM: ANIMALS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW16.04.2021
Um Tiere im Völkerecht geht es im ersten Online-Seminar der HeiParisMax-Partnerschaft, das per Livestream auf dem Völkerrechtsblog verfolgt werden kann: Am 16. April 2021 (14:30-16:30) wird Professorin Anne Peters den... Go to video* Media
* Völkerrechtspodcast#4 DAS GEWALTVERBOT
09.04.2021
Erik Tuchtfeld Philipp Eschenhagen Isabel Lischewski Sophie Schuberth Der Krieg als Mittel der Politik: Das ist im heutigen Völkerrecht nicht mehr zulässig. Nichtsdestotrotz werden nach wie vor Kriege geführt und gegen das Gewaltverbot verstoßen. Isabel erklärt, welche... Go to video* Media
RULE OF LAW RULES #3: “THE GDPR GOT VIRAL IN THE WORLD AND INFLUENCED LATIN AMERICA”25.03.2021
Today we present you the third episode of the podcast series “Rule of Law Rules” by the Konrad-Adenauer-Foundation. Hosted by Dr Angela Daly, a socio-legal scholar of digital technology, each... Go to video * Völkerrechtspodcast* Media
#6 (DES-)INFORMATION04.06.2021
Sophie Schuberth Erik Tuchtfeld Isabel Lischewski Philipp Eschenhagen Fake News und Desinformations-Kampagnen sind derzeit in aller Munde. Aber wann genau können wir überhaupt von Fake News sprechen? Gibt es völkerrechtliche Normen, die die Verbreitung von falschenoder... Go to video
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RULE OF LAW RULES #5: “THE RISK THAT EXISTS IN THE DIGITAL ECOSYSTEMIS DECENTRALIZED”
27.05.2021
“Rule of Law Rules” is our new podcast on Rule of Law in the age of digitalization from the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. The host of the podcast is Dr Angela Daly, a... Go to video* Media
RAUBKUNST IM HUMBOLDT FORUM – DOWN THE RABBIT HOLE OFINTERTEMPORALITY
11.05.2021
Das Humboldt-Forum befindet sich im wiederaufgebauten Berliner Stadtschloss, und wird in diesem Jahr sukzessive eröffnen. Beherbergen soll das Museum u.a. die Sammlungen des ethnologischen Museums und des Museums für Asiatische... Go to video* Media
* Völkerrechtspodcast #5 UMWELTVÖLKERRECHT07.05.2021
Philipp Eschenhagen Sophie Schuberth Isabel Lischewski Erik Tuchtfeld Umweltvölkerrecht könnte eine Erfindung jüngeren Datums sein, ist aber ungefähr so alt wie das Völkerrecht selbst: Denn Streitigkeiten über die Verteilung globaler Ressourcen und die Auswirkungen von menschengemachter Umweltverschmutzung... Go to video* Media
RULE OF LAW RULES #4: “THE DATA PRIVACY TODAY DIVIDED THE WORLD INTO THREE BIG REGIONS.”29.04.2021
“Rule of Law Rules” is our new podcast on Rule of Law in the age of digitalization from the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. The host of the podcast is Dr Angela Daly, a... Go to video* Media
LISTEN: A VERY SHORT HISTORY OF PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW28.04.2021
Lena Faber Niklas Gantenberg We are happy to present an episode of the podcast series “Public International Law in a Nutshell”. The podcast was produced in a podcast seminar (‘Public International Law in a... Go to video* Media
LIVESTREAM: ANIMALS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW16.04.2021
Um Tiere im Völkerecht geht es im ersten Online-Seminar der HeiParisMax-Partnerschaft, das per Livestream auf dem Völkerrechtsblog verfolgt werden kann: Am 16. April 2021 (14:30-16:30) wird Professorin Anne Peters den... Go to video* Media
* Völkerrechtspodcast#4 DAS GEWALTVERBOT
09.04.2021
Erik Tuchtfeld Philipp Eschenhagen Isabel Lischewski Sophie Schuberth Der Krieg als Mittel der Politik: Das ist im heutigen Völkerrecht nicht mehr zulässig. Nichtsdestotrotz werden nach wie vor Kriege geführt und gegen das Gewaltverbot verstoßen. Isabel erklärt, welche... Go to video* Media
RULE OF LAW RULES #3: “THE GDPR GOT VIRAL IN THE WORLD AND INFLUENCED LATIN AMERICA”25.03.2021
Today we present you the third episode of the podcast series “Rule of Law Rules” by the Konrad-Adenauer-Foundation. Hosted by Dr Angela Daly, a socio-legal scholar of digital technology, each... Go to video * Völkerrechtspodcast* Media
#6 (DES-)INFORMATION04.06.2021
Sophie Schuberth Erik Tuchtfeld Isabel Lischewski Philipp Eschenhagen Fake News und Desinformations-Kampagnen sind derzeit in aller Munde. Aber wann genau können wir überhaupt von Fake News sprechen? Gibt es völkerrechtliche Normen, die die Verbreitung von falschenoder... Go to video
* Media
RULE OF LAW RULES #5: “THE RISK THAT EXISTS IN THE DIGITAL ECOSYSTEMIS DECENTRALIZED”
27.05.2021
“Rule of Law Rules” is our new podcast on Rule of Law in the age of digitalization from the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. The host of the podcast is Dr Angela Daly, a... Go to video* Media
RAUBKUNST IM HUMBOLDT FORUM – DOWN THE RABBIT HOLE OFINTERTEMPORALITY
11.05.2021
Das Humboldt-Forum befindet sich im wiederaufgebauten Berliner Stadtschloss, und wird in diesem Jahr sukzessive eröffnen. Beherbergen soll das Museum u.a. die Sammlungen des ethnologischen Museums und des Museums für Asiatische... Go to videoLatest Symposia
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* Völkerrechtspodcast Most Recent Comments Dear Mr. Cornides, Thank you very much for your comment. Firstly, I would like to draw your attention to Vo v. France para. 80, where the Court, summarising the Convention’s...« Spyridoula Katsoni Go to article Owing to the very substance of the act, killing an innocent human being can never become a "right", even if - which unfortunately never can be excluded - a prestigious...« Jakob Cornides Go to article "enjoy a significant performance advantage over other female athletes, which is of such magnitude as to be capable of subverting fair competition within the female category" What happens when a...« Apokrif Go to article Submit your contribution We welcome contributions on all topics relating to international law and international legal thought. You can send us your text, or get in touch with a preliminary inquiry at: editorial-team@voelkerrechtsblog.org Subscribe to the blog Suscribe to stay informed via e-mail about new posts published on Völkerrechtsblog and enter your e-mail address below.Contact
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