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Denunciation under the ICSID Convention: Right of State versus Remedy for Investor

September 26, 2019 Shreya Jha & Vivek Sharma

I. Introduction The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (“ICSID”) Convention (also known as the “Washington Convention”) is a…

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Posted in: International Investment Law Filed under: Consent, Denunciation, ICSID

Equality of Arms: Difference in Interpretations of the ad hoc Tribunals and European Court of Human Rights

September 22, 2019 Ravleen Chhabra

The International Criminal Justice system, as is known, is based on the essentials of fairness, reasonableness, and equality. Human Rights…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: human rights

The Decision of the Svea Court of Appeal in PL Holdings v Poland: A Mutiny against Achmea?

August 7, 2019 Konstantina Georgaki

It has been over one year since the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) rendered its judgment in…

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Posted in: EU and ECJ Filed under: European Union Law

The CJEU Judgment in Tjebbes: EU Citizenship, the Advent of the Charter, and Implications for the Loss of Nationality after Criminal Conviction

June 24, 2019 Tom Boekestein

Nine years after delivering its judgment in the infamous Rottmann case, the Grand Chamber of the Court of Justice of…

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Posted in: EU and ECJ Filed under: Loss of nationality and EU citizenship, Tjebbes

Corporations as Unindicted Co-Perpetrators Before the International Criminal Court: Compliance or Circumvention?

June 18, 2019 Anmol Jain and Tanushree Ghosh

In 2014, a communication detailing the commission of crimes against humanity in Cambodia was filed before the International Criminal Court.…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: International Criminal Court (ICC)

Embracing the Global Compact on Refugees

May 24, 2019 Harsh Mahaseth and Dikshya Koirala

The existing body of refugee and migration law was recently complemented by the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR). The GCR…

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Posted in: Human Rights, Public International Law Filed under: RefugeeLaw

Counter-Terrorism Laws: Transgressing Human Rights in the Name of Security of the State

May 21, 2019 Angela Dua

Security of individuals is of an utmost importance, and governments have a fundamental obligation to protect their citizens and to…

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Posted in: Public International Law, Terrorism Filed under: counter-terrorismlaws

Sic Utere Principle Revisited: State Responsibility for Cross-Border Violence?

May 6, 2019 Soheil Ghasemi Bojd

Introduction On 13 February 2019, a suicide attack targeting the personnel affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: SicUterePrinciple, StateResponsibility

From Acknowledgment to Affirmation: Dissecting the Promise of the ICJ Ruling in Legal Consequences of the Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965

March 29, 2019 Anmolam and Farheen Ahmad

An advisory opinion (hereinafter referred as judgment) rendered by the International Court of Justice in Legal Consequences of the Separation…

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Posted in: Public International Law Filed under: decolonisation

The Right to Consent to Military Intervention: Limited or Not?

March 8, 2019 Raghavi Viswanath

In his recent Security Council speech on conflict resolution, the representative of the US remarked that ‘all that is needed [for…

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Posted in: Public International Law, Use of Force Filed under: Right to Consent

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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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