Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: March 2023

Case Western Reserve University School of Law
ISSN 0008-7254


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 422

March 22, 2009

  • Criminalizing humanitarian intervention.

  • A question of intent: the crime of aggression and unilateral humanitarian intervention.

  • Transcript: jurisdictional and trigger mechanisms.

  • A pragmatic approach to jurisdictional and definitional requirements for the crime of aggression in the Rome Statute.

  • Ambiguities in articles 5(2), 121 and 123 of the Rome Statute.

  • Report of the Cleveland experts meeting: the International Criminal Court and the crime of aggression.

  • An analysis of United Nations Security Council resolutions: are all countries treated equally?

  • The case for Kurdish statehood in Iraq.

  • January 01, 2009

  • Time to reexamine regulation designed to counter the financing of terrorism.

  • The demise of the U.N. economic sanctions regime to deprive terrorists of funding.

  • Disrupting terrorist financing with civil litigation.

  • Reaching beyond banks: how to target trade-based money laundering and terrorist financing outside the financial sector.

  • Establishing a legal framework for property rights to natural resources in outer space.

  • A proposal for change in immigration policy: asylum for traditionally married spouses.

  • Giving bite to the EU-U.S. data privacy safe harbor: model solutions for effective enforcement.

  • Combating terrorist financing: general report of the Cleveland Preparatory Colloquium.

  • Combating terrorist financing: draft resolution.

  • December 22, 2009

  • Just three mistakes!(international humanitarian law)

  • The consequences of unlawful preemption and the legal duty to protect the human rights of its victims.

  • Magna Carta, the interstices of procedure, and Guantanamo.

  • Historical perspective on Guantanamo Bay: the arrival of the high value detainees.

  • Organizational culture, professional ethics and Guantanamo.

  • Some observations on the future of U.S. military commissions.

  • Are you there, Geneva? It's me, Guantanamo.

  • The cost of indefinitely kicking the can: why continued 'prolonged' detention is no solution to Guantanamo.

  • Guantanamo habeas review: are the D.C. District Court's decisions consistent with IHL internment standards?

  • Guantanamo, habeas corpus, and standards of proof: viewing the law through multiple lenses.

  • In pursuit of justice: prosecuting terrorism cases in the federal courts: 2009 update and recent developments.

  • Not 'by all means necessary': a comparative framework for post-9/11 approaches to counterterrorism.

  • Prosecuting alleged terrorists by military commission: a prudent option.

  • A hybrid court for a hybrid war.

  • International law and the torture memos.

  • Civil liability of Bush, Cheney, et al. for torture, cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment and forced disappearance.

  • Beyond the torture memos: perceptual filters, cultural commitments, and partisan identity.

  • Prosecuting Guantanamo in Europe: can and shall the masterminds of the 'torture memos' be held criminally responsible on the basis of universal jurisdiction?

  • The wrongheaded and dangerous campaign to criminalize good faith legal advice.

  • Sexual violence: standing by the victim.

  • Ending corporate impunity: how to really curb the pillaging of natural resources.

  • Perfect pitch: how U.S. sports financing and recruiting models can restore harmony between FIFA and the EU.

  • Bringing the crime of aggression within the active jurisdiction of the ICC.

  • Informal inter-sessional meeting on the crime of aggression, hosted by the Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, at the Princeton Club, New York.

  • Non-paper by the chairman on the elements of crimes.

  • Non-paper by the chairman on the conditions for the exercise of jurisdiction.

  • January 01, 2010

  • Digital multi-media and the limits of privacy law.

  • Washington and CCTV: it's 2010, not nineteen eighty-four.

  • CCTV and the 2010 Vancouver games: spatial tactics and political strategies.

  • National IDs in a global world: surveillance, security, and citizenship.

  • Privacy and counter-terrorism: the pervasiveness of data.

  • Unlimited power: why the President's (warrantless) surveillance program is unconstitutional.

  • Litigating the state secrets privilege.