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Year: 2021

Climate Change Litigation: Royal Dutch Shell must reduce its CO2 emissions by 45% net

May 28, 2021 Edward Brans and Mathijs Peters

On the 26th of May 2021, the District Court of The Hague found that Royal Dutch Shell plc (Shell) is…

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Posted in: Climate Change Litigation, International Environmental Law

Does the ‘defined territory’ include submerged land?

May 10, 2021 Daniela Martins

Some notes on the notion of ‘territory’ regarding legal concerns presented by sea level rise Currently, territory is considered synonymous…

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Posted in: Climate Change Law, Public International Law, Territory

Uti Possidetis, Ethnic Composition and Equity in 1921 Latvian-Lithuanian Border Arbitration

May 5, 2021 Rytis Satkauskas

During their very first years of statehood, modern Latvia and Lithuania confronted the urgent need to determine the borderline between…

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Posted in: Arbitration, Public International Law

Deconstructing treaty parallelism and overlap: The infamous “Achilles Heel”

May 3, 2021 Aayushi Singh

It has been remarked as early as 1991 that texts of international investment agreements (IIAs) differ in many important respects…

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Posted in: International Investment Law

Preemption or Reprisal? Analyzing President Biden’s Airstrike in Syria

April 28, 2021 Christine Carpenter

With his recent airstrike in Syria, President Biden fell in line with a corrosive interpretation of both jus ad bellum…

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Posted in: Human Rights, International Humanitarian Law

Why was the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 a Watershed in the Evolution of Public International Law?

April 26, 2021 Yoav Javier Tenembaum

By the  Kellogg-Briand Pact, officially known as the General Treaty for Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy,…

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Posted in: International Affairs

Is Arbitration an Appropriate Method for the Resolution of Novel Climate Change Disputes?

April 23, 2021 Tatyana Jacob

The green economy framework, contained in such instruments as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (‘UNFCCC’) and the…

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Posted in: Arbitration, Climate Change Litigation

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

April 12, 2021 Victor Santos Mariottini de Oliveira

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

The Conundrum of Jurisdiction over War Crimes in Occupied Palestinian Territory

April 7, 2021 Apurva Ambasth

On 3 March 2021, the International Criminal Court (ICC) launched an investigation into the war crimes committed in the Gaza…

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Posted in: Armed Conflict, International Criminal Law

Carbon Border Adjustment as a Mirror of EU ETS: Contemplating WTO-Compliant Mechanisms for Reciprocal Protection

April 2, 2021 Bo Hyun Kim

A centrepiece of the European Union’s Green Deal, the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is awaiting formal proposals for its…

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Posted in: Economic Law, International Environmental Law, WTO

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About

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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