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Rethinking Ampal v Egypt

December 23, 2019 Sean O'Reilly

A State’s duty to provide full protection and security to foreign investments is a staple of modern investment treaty law…

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Posted in: Public International Law

Crisis in the WTO: Roots and Restorations

December 19, 2019 Mathangi K

Since its inception in 1995, the Dispute Settlement System (DSS) of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has built a formidable…

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Posted in: WTO Filed under: Dispute Settlement, WTO

Tjebbes and the Autonomisation of EU Citizenship

December 16, 2019 Serhii Lashyn

The CJEU delivered its judgment in the Tjebbes case. Sparking vibrant academic discussions and only further confusing the referring national…

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Posted in: EU and ECJ Filed under: CJEU, EU Citizenship, Tjebbes

The Inapplicability of the Geneva Conventions to Self-Determination Movements

November 25, 2019 Shayan Ahmed Khan

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has recognised the right to self-determination as an obligation erga omnes and an essential…

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Posted in: Uncategorized Filed under: Geneva Conventions, Self-determination

Hong Kong – China Arrangement on Interim Measures in Aid of Arbitrations: A Giant Leap Ahead?

November 20, 2019 Prince Todi

On October 1st 2019, the Arrangement Concerning Mutual Assistance in Court-ordered Interim Measures in Aid of Arbitral Proceedings (hereinafter referred…

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Posted in: Arbitration, Public International Law, Trade Filed under: arbitration

A Right to Bear Cyber Arms?

November 19, 2019 Andrew Beale Obe

The reintroduction of the Active Cyber Defense Certainty Act (ACDC) to the 116th U.S. Congress in June 2019 has reignited…

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Posted in: Uncategorized Filed under: Cybersecurity

Addressing the Female Deficit in Peacekeeping: Will the UN’s Rhetoric Finally Translate to Action?

November 18, 2019 Lea Christopher

An open Security Council debate in April of this year was the latest of a series of initiatives announced by…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: Gender Parity, Women in Peacekeeping

Death Penalty: Does it Fit within the Contours of CIL ?

November 17, 2019 Pooja Mehta

Recently, the International Court of Justice pronounced its verdict in the matter of the detention and trial of an Indian…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: Death Penalty

Throw Custom to the Wind: Examining the Life Cycle of Customary International Law in the Absence of a Custom-Making Moment

October 17, 2019 Christian Delev

Doctrinal Indeterminacy and Customary International Law Customary International Law (CIL) has been the victim of its own existential fluidity. From…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: CustomeryInternationalLaw

The Era of Corporate Criminal Responsibility

October 10, 2019 Ishita Chakrabarty

This post is a part-response to Anmol Jain and Tanushree Ghosh’s thought-provoking article ‘Corporations as un-indicted co-perpetrators before the ICC’…

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Posted in: Human Rights

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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.

Recent Blogs

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