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American Society of International Law Proceedings of the Annual Meeting American Society of International Law 2010: Index & Table of Contents PDF

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Preview American Society of International Law Proceedings of the Annual Meeting American Society of International Law 2010: Index & Table of Contents

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ONE HUNDRED FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW CHAIRS OF THE COMMITTEE Co-EDITORS OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL MEETING K. Russell LaMotte K. Russell LaMotte Hari M. Osofsky Hari M. Osofsky Allen S. Weiner Allen S. Weiner CONTENTS Foreword An Introduction: International Law in a Time of Change K. Russell LaMotte, Hari M. Osofsky, and Allen S. Weiner New Thinking on Social and Economic Rights: Honoring Virginia Leary Introduction: A Celebration of Virginia Leary iaa ca ae ia ee ia ed 3 The General Comments of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Philip Alston Remarks by: Andrew Clapham Mona Rishmawi The Right to Health: Assessing How Far the Discourse Has Evolved Internationally and Within the United States Alicia Ely Yamin Risk, Science, and Law in the WTO Risk, Science, and Law in the WTO: The Centrality of Institutional Choice Gregory Shaffer What Can the WTO Learn from International Environmental Law? Annecoos Wiersema Resolving Complex Health-Related Disputes Under the WTO’s Dispute Settlement System DY cnciiicracdaaviscsusivscennsbeinbicnnuSosnoianmtndadlaieipatnasakmctcaiit ipaRgailtaiennasritatanaiantneesd 26 Empirical Approaches to International Law The Transformative Potential of Rigorous Empirical Research PI I ais acavcsctnscecicsncionsdcughioetvecbiecemnmnusslilaps aciguetubieabiisasalanseaaiiahatatalsditeteiwesaaaual 31 Empirical Modalities: Lessons for the Future of International Investment Susan Franck Getting to Closure: Winding Up the International and Hybrid Criminal Tribunals International Law and the Closure of the International and Hybrid Criminal Tribunals Valerie Oosterveld The Security Council’s Consideration of the Establishment of Residual Mechanisms for the International Criminal Tribunals Huw Llewellyn The Role of States in the Closure of the International and Hybrid Criminal Tribunals Anne Joyce The Special Tribunal for Lebanon and the Discussion of Residual Mechanisms Giorgia Tortora New Voices I From International Law to International Conflicts of Law: The Fragmentation of Legitimacy Harlan Grant Cohen The Limits of Legal Citizenship: Reading Aleem v. Aleem IRE i: ce ee ee tMCRT EEE Citizens of the World EE ee Oe TT RE NT I ET. Engaging Religious Laws, Players, and Communities PERSO OTE EDL Ee A oe LEONE TE TE TE TE 58 International Human Rights Law, Foreign Sovereign Immunity, and National Courts Introductory Remarks by: Curtis A. Bradley Remarks by: Michael J. Edney Immunity and Human Rights? A Bifurcated Approach Rosanne van Alebeek The Goldstone Report and the Modern Law of War Introductory Remarks by: Lucy Reed The Importance of the Goldstone Report Omar Dajani A Critique of the Goldstone Report and Its Treatment of International Humanitarian Law Abraham Bell Teaching International Law: Lessons from Clinical Education Introductory Remarks by: Richard J. Wilson Clinical Education and International Human Rights Law: Retrospective on UQAM’s Pedagogical Methodology Bernard Duhaime Teaching Human Rights to Advance Social Justice in Russia Lusine Hovhannisian Remarks by: NNN IIIT HIIIIINIILLT cin inssuscaisitetaiacadsnbaaiiaadsdiessscacedabenunenieeatantéeceinindiadanuatiaduenimanienniaedte 95 Legal Clinics in Continental Western Europe: The Approach of the Utrecht Legal Clinic on Conflict, Human Rights, and International Justice Héctor Olasolo A Comparative Look at Extraterritoriality: Bagram and Beyond Introductory Remarks by: Chiméne Keitner Remarks by: Kal Raustiala Douglas Letter Sabine Nolke Ralph Wilde Addendum: Some Cases and Commentary Haiti: International Law and Disaster Introductory Remarks by: SN UD ssecisciiic tiniesshita can e nat ii 115 Remarks by: Muzaffar Chishti Disability-Inclusive Disaster Preparedness and Response: Challenges and Opportunities for Reconstruction in Haiti Janet E. Lord Accounting for Haiti’s Children After the Earthquake: Immediate Needs with Lifelong Consequences FI ENE Gidiciteniecnnnciissiicsivisicinaiaibendiiibbabiitniienieseancbniitabinpaaniaiiiinibidieaniidiadeanaalibcalaa’ Hot Topics in GATS and Human Rights Introduction James Thuo Gathii Trade in Services Agreements, the Financial Crisis, and Human Rights Implications Jane Kelsey Temporary Movement of Workers and Human Rights Protection: Interfacing the **Mode 4’’ of GATS with Non-Trade Bilateral Migration Agreements Marion Panizzon ‘*Predatory Globalization’’: The WTO Agreement on Trade in Services, Migration, and Public Health in Africa Obijiofor Aginam Providing Global Public Goods Under International Law Global Public Goods: An Introduction Rebecca M. Bratspies Providing Public Goods Under International Law: Of Openness and Enclosure Sabrina Safrin Trust, Verify, or Incentivize? Effectuating Public International Law Regulating Public Goods Through Market Mechanisms Anne van Aaken Women in International Law Interest Group Luncheon Where I Sit and Where I Stand Dinah Shelton Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Modern Challenges to Use of Force Law Introductory Remarks by: Mary Ellen O’Connell Remarks by: Paul Pillar Hina Shamsi . John Radsan Evolving Intersections Between Treaty Law and Domestic Law From Counterterrorism to Climate Change: Are Treaties Necessary to Solve International Problems? Andrew N. Keller Are Treaties Always Necessary? How U.S. Domestic Law Can Give Teeth to Non-Binding International Commitments Mallory Stewart Teaching and Practicing International Law in a Global Environment: Toward a Common Language of International Law Legal Education in the Twenty-First Century Mahnoush H. Arsanjani Teaching and Practicing International Law in a Global Environment: Toward a Common Language of International Law Rosalyn Higgins The United Nations Audiovisual Library of International Law I a clade cietapiemeccibaieolcaoidlai ti cctiaias Keynote Address: The Obama Administration and International Law I I a eae a ea Arms Control Challenges Faced by the Obama Administration Introductory Remarks by: Michael Matheson Remarks by: SD inicac e dastbasitootnseetcseninanmnanscessicuaaieeaa aedsioataaetion David Koplow SNE iki cclacciclemunsiesniba uae tidbits ceanicamsiaaiaidaataiimnnint Discussion Corruption and Human Rights Linking Corruption and Human Rights Se I oils cicessncennsvestlinnataiacashandieniidinanatdssdiondidintetaseuhaantinishasbanemnassese ame Making the Link Between Corruption and Human Rights: Promises and Perils Joel M. Ngugi 246 Corruption and Human Rights: The Challenges of Mineral Resources Stewardship L. Amede Obiora 250 International Environmental Justice: Possibilities, Limits, and Tensions Introductory Remarks by: UTEP CTUIIIIITIT\shusciciepiaiipnsniniisiuiteiinbiiiedaeirscaenoalnsj ittiiieen itiiaeh 255 International Law in a Time of Climate Change, Sovereignty Loss, and Economic Unity TE TO New Voices II Developing a New Structural Framework for Parties to an International Crime: Toward a Capacious Concept of Principalship a re ke 261 WTO Inconsistent Countermeasures—A View from the Outside I TN I cscsnaicnsslsissgteat aiadaictan tieD ei haaa ai d 264 Justice Administration in Meheba Refugee Settlement: Refugee Perceptions, Preferences, and Strategic Decisions Se I vices cai al aaa 270 A Behavioral Approach to Human Rights Te IIIT wsicienscitecisetsestt eeniiienisnpaiiicgsntiasibtaiteinetaliailacaaepietmeibiiidan csie s: SI Same or Different? Bush and Obama Administration Approaches to Fighting Terrorists The International Legal Framework for Fighting Terrorists According to the Bush and the Obama Administrations: Same or Different, Correct or Incorrect? III ici ahha ihcnaceiccaibnllaihnen saeciabieanedvildesi taema mbaaiendaaihaadi Aped es 277 Distinction with a Difference Diane Marie Amann ssc ceiplimeiac again nkcont io enhblienleaphediaacadanedicaniaabeaaNeiaaanieealan 280 Preventing the Next Financial Crisis: Coordination and Competition in Global Finance Introductory Remarks by: SILER RS OR TR RAE EIT OAL OTT RR CR eT 285 Crisis and Coordination: Regulatory Design in Financial Crises RIES ROTTS seb hater Ne OA Ren nena Ce OER a air eS ORT ERA AE 286 Prospects for Coordination and Competition in Global Finance IE, sic ceccetps sac nagstmhaica iorsu na age sheng ieta came lie deeanalaamcaaaia 289 The International Law of Financial Crisis? SN ir. IID rit excensnisdvairad cicsiginscrasisicedibvob snl sasciensiatiibodlonademsuiiealapaalcbnaic leuiaelalteadpaeanie ” ae Updating the Restatement Introductory Remarks by: NUNIT SIIIIINIED sessile leichmannii daaiuiaicamnmgeamanaataanilth 301 Remarks by: I III 5... so cnses oaasinusabecnienebinedansnoaaanaaaciemeanaenebeoeebcamniaiabatanadianedhanmiaaaiaaie 302 Jurisdiction and Immunities in U.S. Foreign Relations Law Te, See Ge I Bs I Sassi ccccseeintincneitncaceesisinsarnevinossnaseaioeataeds 307 Remarks by: NINE 5 censssicicnussevasititenccdlgiecbemnideaaleeaabectanmabcbaameieaM paibeed mteaeaeaaaapeaoieateeein 311 BID sinssisictinitinicssrsteaiseiiasinacsieipititaceaiilinnsbedasaeiiiiieniniiinleliiamaistimnjasibalinuaiinaneaie 313 IID snissnvistisitsisssansrsnsennsucesnnindiptiussinlsesetbeniisbadbaihap hadaadisaidneitgatneitteeatdaaptauteiatdbe 315 Vii Non-State Actors and the Emerging Climate Change Law Regime Non-State Actor Access and Influence in International Legal and Policy Negotiations EN EEE EE Ee OC OREO TR ear Ae ee rE 325 The Rising Use of International Law by African Judiciaries International Law and African Judiciaries: The Example of South Africa EI TR OT OR ERT PF PERT a RO A ETE. 329 Domesticating International Law Through Truth and Reconciliation Commissions: The Case of the Liberian TRC pT A RB pce 28 a ne en ae Ed a OE EE EEE eae Le Ee aS 333 Reform and Restructuring at International Financial Institutions Introductory Remarks by: INS LE CS OPOET eR e EN MTT MER ee ee ene ENO Remarks by: CN Rare a ea LO NC A TA TORT TORN NT OTT eT TT PTT 340 I 342 CSS EEE OLE TATE ETRE TL ATPL EN ORE 343 CN IER See ee ATR RTE EE NE TE RR OE aE TEE TOT a 345 I NN ao sci Dacatiac li amma tanned aienaanaseae aaoaaenadials 346 EERE SEE Nae Ne SPT, ee Ce NNO te) a RON FOE A SO Rn ry ee 347 Creating and Building a ‘‘State’’: International Law and Kosovo The Case of Kosovo: Self-Determination, Secession, and Statehood Under International Law Ih ha caapendeei aniseed banoceeebd nbeniaeaaaeisaae aan atEnies 361 Building the Rule of Law in Kosovo EE 8 RE SIRE eA DOS EEE RPE eo Te ID 366 War and Law in Cyberspace The Conduct of Hostilities in and via Cyberspace FE EEE eee eae ee cee eee a ONE EE fe teen ae eek eee coe 371 Family, Sex, and Reproduction: Emerging Issues in International Law Introductory Remarks by: REE TEES SARS ee Ee ce OE ee a EN EET TS MR, es eoee me 375 Procedural Turn in Transnational Abortion Law NE is IN goede chactienseren dees segcnaetaescuaaceeaolsphdisesesdasiiccanisdasnetneleedadammiatenmanmemiiean 377 Same-Sex Marriage, Transnational Activism, and International Law: Strategic Objectives Beyond Freedom to Marry RR ETI ERS EOE EN TT aR SFP nT a ee RELL 380 Maternal Mortality and Human Rights BI IN cbinci sie sacsac acicpansteldbuminssticacdticsinadecsiabsbinnennsenicaniadannnmneininienbercecenttaapeecbaaoe 383 Sexual Rights and State Governance IU naelenct ocd a elcaaeea amaseaeciianeneiatanaeoe 385 Theoretical Insights at the Margins of International Law: TWAIL and CRT Introduction: Theoretical Insights from the Cutting Edge TO ON a hee dcile erica onesie a Segunda aenanedanuiuesaunbeaie 389 The Danger of the New Legal Colonialism i wie NINN IT, 2s aancaiigseebiniebdibbudasonanssnnchevsandeaeeestsdeuamenndnaeadiaies 393 Vili Remembering Tom Franck: What He Taught Us About the Recourse to Force The Recourse to Force by the United Nations: The Contributions of Thomas M. Franck Dan Sarooshi Thomas Franck and the Use of Force ares Ia IIE se icicle tcc esas bles aoa aaa oa areal 403 Remembering Tom Franck Jordan Paust ICSID in the Twenty-First Century: An Interview with Meg Kinnear Introductory Remarks by: David Caron Remarks by: Meg Kinnear Implications of the Global Financial Crisis on International Trade and Investment Regimes Origins of the Financial Crisis and International/National Responses: An Overview Chris Brummer International Trade and the Financial Crisis Elizabeth Trujillo The Global Financial Crisis and International Investment Regimes Jeffery P. Commission The Impact of the Financial Crisis on Trade and Investment Padideh Ala’i Transnational Legal Dialogue, a Human Rights-Based Hierarchy, and the Creation of Norms Introductory Remarks by: RN IN Ws cccicserii ancien suisancolieieicpaicaacaiipenlcasiiald empaiesissaaibauadepabcbisnenias iasciaiadadeaanidicmabitaaabe 453 The Prohibition on Torture: Driving Jus Cogens Home? Pe IY isiicicctsicicicesussiteiscisishiictzaitbimnacneae snlieiib lcataaieiadgipaieiei e 454 National Security Versus Human Rights: An Uneven Playing Field IN III dacsc eisicavsnescoriniecsnsecnassamntcteeunseepictownantnsibadobatannaghaanmaicetamsisabamaiaaidaasteacece 458 Bottom-Up Constitutionalization of International Law: The Targeted Sanctions Regime as a Case Study BITTE scnscoscisenisinsic:ieeteiacieiibehicandiiaehniaiianindeanaeaeahatibaleaaiibpielaineedii 462 The Future of Transnational Judicial Dialogue Melissa A. Waters Bottom-Up Strategies for Survival and Resistance: Examples from Latin America and Elsewhere Good Bananas, Bad Bananas: Hard Lessons from a Soft War Ibrahim Gassama Guantanamo as Subordination: Detainees as Resisting Empire Ernesto Hernandez-Lopez Manley O. Hudson Medal Lecture On Being Accountable in a Kaleidoscopic World Edith Brown Weiss Keynote Address: The Use of Foreign Law—A Comparative View of Canada and the United States Presented by: Beverley McLachlin ASIL Annual Dinner: Reflections on Change in International Law Introductory Remarks by: Lucy F. Reed Remarks by: David D. Caron Stephen Schwebel Edith Brown Weiss BR SL ee ee Fee ee ee en Ne MN Snr irs Ieee 500 0 | EEE NOTE TT a PEE SERENE NITE oe ETT REET ET ETT 501 a ac fhe lete ead enka ae Sains 502 Charles N. Brower . 503 FR Ee nc aI ne a a eR Eee eRe eee tee 503 (SRE rR EE RP RE PE ee nn RE RE RTECS a TOS 504 EET OR ora TE COOTER RR Ee eRe Ue eere e 505 ES A RR I RE MEE TOI Ns en nN seb near 506 RT eee eT TE ee RE EO TEE PERT oF eRe TeE RROR Fe 507 The ICC Review Conference and Changing U.S. Policy Toward the Court Introductory Remarks by: RSC RAE RE Rist cee rer eee eR eee Te TR RTE EME Te IES Ay Meee eon eae 509 Remarks by: BISCO on CERO re PC Re MRE sn Oe Eee Re 510 The Office of the Prosecutor, the ICC Review Conference, and the Way Forward rE IS 7 salons dh nensnptu vactlbeneslsndahitbebiumennaaavaabauniamndeoeahts : Remarks by: Stephen Rapp I ihlal ciia Ai eMC NN China and East Asia on the World Stage The Socialization of China, Japan, and Korea (CJK) in International Economic Law: Assessment and Implications Saadia Pekkanen China on the World Stage: A Trade Law Perspective The Road Forward from Copenhagen: Climate Change Policy in the 21st Century Introductory Remarks by: K. Russell LaMotte Remarks by: Daniel Bodansky Jeffrey M. Klein Ann Petsonk Advancing Women’s Rights Internationally Constituting Terms for International Change: Reflecting on Strategies for Women’s Rights PU MRI, acctthiictaicasnasuintbsncnanancdinecctionsatsuiil osaslaiaiiooseneatoruorenaicl oaems aimaibuhessmtmauadsibease s 561 Lessons from the Cotton Field Case About Gender Justice Advancing Women’s Rights in Conflict and Post-Conflict Situations PIII, CINE UNTIIIIIITEN cvsnisa::éciunssconinnicaeheeahiceamtisnsedn daeiaritahiatttmdacandiinniceaeliidnitnbeiits 568 Treaty Bodies and Beyond: The Practice and Process of Translating International Norms into Domestic Law Introductory Remarks by: eI 5cicin 1s scutes cascades at ponea abasaeeese Seasia emiaavaadentaaaeamaedeuesitaces 571 Iterative Engagements: The European Union and International Normativity SR I cts 5cscasisoncatecnenietoniewnssuiachsernaascuersacvbiacesidanataiaileseadaliedaslincsimedbuisaial 572 The International Labor Organization and the Translation of International Norms into Domestic Law SP I I abies cisckisssancina senrsesneginit ack denaeonimaenkan ues emsadeiliaensdatesae tanan abanaaaaeai 576 Poster Sessions Judicial Review by EU and Domestic Courts of the Al Qaeda and Taliban Sanctions Regime: Counterterrorism, Due Process, and the Search for the Golden Mean I icine senile enbseeaiecianidaatacagalaidigaiitiondids 581 Releasing Captured Documents IIR ictbloateda tama egtoldaavinn +c adanenpba laaiaiakaseeiann 584 Laboratory of the International Community? Role of International Organizations in the Re-establishment of the Rule of Law in Kosovo IN I isan ve icernstinsncdccasbciconilanecutiantjeensssaiiel eaaiseahdeadna sshieea itosnineemieaaisnaht s 588 International Arbitration in Times of Change: Fairness and Transparency in Investor-State Disputes ES RI AE OE RI TIE SN REE EN te ore TT 591 104th Annual Meeting Theme Statement and Program ........c.csccccscsesesseeseesenssessnseseeeenes 597 Fifty-First Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition Appendices Minutes of the ASIL Annual General Meeting os 5c cscecssnssaeciggbaaccsa shine etre asain linaliialhcbdpagiee dish dea RAR 635 ASIL Officers and Executive Council American Journal of International Law IN MA III oc sseicnsiicansivonnstncxvssdcsabnsicontiphenesakonsbienkassnnnaeiieesoioiuaiaaennasr h 641 Se I INET INNES NOIIIINID naciiinesccenscsessseiseenreenciicinstictensieiisinseetninnniiesieciiiatcnianstbiaagid 642

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.