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Category: Genocide

Environmental Damage in Armed Conflict: A TWAIL Perspective

April 6, 2022 Manasa Sainidhi Venkatachalam Leave a comment

The Editors of the Cambridge International Law Journal Blog endorses this statement by the Fellows of the Lauterpacht Centre for International…

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Posted in: Armed Conflict, Genocide, Human Rights, Int'l Legal Theory, International Environmental Law, International Humanitarian Law, Public International Law, Use of Force, War

The Uyghur Genocide and Remedial Secession: Legal Grounds for the Rebirth of East Turkistan?

April 12, 2021 Victor Santos Mariottini de Oliveira Leave a comment

The Chinese state has consistently upheld assimilative policies since the 19th century, when national unity and political integration arguably became…

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Posted in: Genocide, Human Rights

Prohibition of statelessness and the Rohingya crisis

March 8, 2018 Swagat Baruah

Introduction The Rohingyas, “the world’s most persecuted minorities”, are facing an unprecedented situation in history. Along with a deepening identity…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Genocide Filed under: Rohingyas

Definition of Victim in the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide: On the Effect of States in Determination of Victims of Genocide and Requirement to Revise the Convention

February 26, 2017 Bavver Kılıçoğlu Leave a comment

“The fact of genocide is as old as humanity” wrote Jean Paul Sartre. Even though this statement has merit, it needs to…

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Posted in: Current Affairs, Genocide, Human Rights, Public International Law

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The CILJ is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal with a broad focus on international and EU law. It is run by the postgraduate community of the Cambridge Faculty of Law.

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