Annual Report

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW

2005 ‐ 2006

Nicholas Sinclair‐Brown

(1949 – 2006)

Mr Nicholas Sinclair-Brown, Fellow of the Lauterpacht Centre and of Hughes Hall, passed away on Thursday 23 March in London, after a long and doughty fight against cancer. His wife Katerina was with him.

The Centre has lost a long-standing companion and friend.

Nick was a Fellow of the Centre and also of Hughes Hall, where he was a Vice President. He taught on the International Relations M.Phil and M.Stud. both on issues of general international law, trade and investment, and sustainable development, and was an advisor to the Centre for Sustainable Development Law at McGill University. His additional research interests included the history of international maritime salvage law.

Katerina and the Centre dedicated a bench in memory of Nick in the Centre Gardens on 31 May 2006.

1

Introduction

Established in 1983, the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law is a centre for the study of international law at the ; it is the premier centre in the UK for research in the field of international law. In this role, it seeks to provide both a framework and forum for critical and constructive thought about the function, content and working of law in the international community, as well as to develop an appreciation of international law as an applied body of rules and principles. A number of those associated with the Centre are actively involved in the practical development and application of international law.

The Centre is not involved in the formal teaching or supervision of enrolled students of the University: this is the responsibility of the Faculty of Law, of which the Centre is part. The Director, Deputy Director and other Fellows of the Centre, in their role as members of the Faculty, are actively involved in teaching and research supervision. The Centre provides a regular forum for lectures and seminars and other forms of small-group teaching.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 2

2005/6 Highlights

Visit from the Bahrain Royal Family On 20 September 2005, the Centre had the pleasure of welcoming Her Highness Shaikha Sabeeka bint Ebrahim Al Khalifa, wife of His Majesty the King of Bahrain. Her Highness was shown the newly developed Centre facilities at Bahrain House, the development of which was made possible thanks to an exceptionally generous gift from the King of Bahrain in appreciation of work done by Sir Elihu Lauterpacht in the Qatar v. Bahrain Case before the International Court of Justice.

Centre Director Appointed FCO Legal Adviser Mr Daniel Bethlehem, QC, Director of the Centre since 2003, has been appointed Legal Adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in succession to Sir Michael Wood. Daniel resigned as Director of the Lauterpacht Centre at the end of April in order to take up his new appointment and will be greatly missed by all in Cambridge. The Centre thanks Daniel for the long and valued contribution he has made to the Centre and wishes him every success.

Centre Objectives

The specific objectives of the Centre are:

` to serve as a discussion forum for current issues by organising seminars, lectures and meetings aimed at developing both an understanding of international law and solutions to current problems; ` to promote research and publication in international law, including the publication of core research materials; ` to provide in Cambridge an intellectual home for scholars of international law from all over the world who wish to pursue their research in an atmosphere that is stimulating and congenial to the generation and exchange of ideas; ` to provide education and training programs of the highest quality to external institutions under special arrangements made with those institutions; ` to maintain a library of materials relating to international law.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 3

Directorship of the Centre

Daniel Bethlehem QC was Professor James Crawford Director of the Centre from SC, FBA, LLD resumed as 2003 to April 2006, when he Centre Director in April was appointed Legal Adviser 2006 following Daniel to the Foreign & Commonwealth Bethlehem’s departure. He Office. During his time as is the Whewell Professor of Director, Daniel made an International Law at the invaluable contribution to the Centre, University of Cambridge and was Chair of the progressing the development of the Centre’s Faculty of Law from 2003-6. James has an infrastructure and extending the lecture program extensive practice in international law and to include more reflective seminars, such as the international arbitration and is the author/editor series of public 'conversations' involving of numerous publications. The second edition participants from both sides of the Israel- of his book The Creation of States in Palestine issue. International Law was published by OUP in 2006.

Professor Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, Dr Roger O’Keefe has been CBE, QC, was Founder Deputy Director of the Director of the Centre from Centre since 2003 and is 1983 until his retirement in currently Academic Secretary 1955. Now Emeritus Director, of the Faculty of Law. He he remains closely involved teaches international law in the work of the Centre and sits on the and international criminal law. His book, The Management Committee. Eli’s professional work Protection of Cultural Property in Armed includes his presidency of the Eritrea-Ethiopia Conflict, is due to be released as a title in the Boundary Commission, which is charged with Cambridge Studies in International and delimiting and demarcating the boundary Comparative Law series in November 2006. between the two States.

Dr Charlotte Ku has been appointed Acting Director of the Centre from 1 October 2006 for six months whilst James Crawford is away on sabbatical leave. Charlotte is a Senior Fellow of the American Society of International Law having served her term as ASIL Executive Director and Executive Vice- President immediately prior to coming to Cambridge. We look forward to developments at the Centre under her leadership.

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Accommodation & Facilities

The Lauterpacht Centre is located in a fine Victorian family house set in its own attractive garden at No. 5 Cranmer Road. In 1996 a new wing was constructed, which now houses the Finley Library on the ground floor, with the Snyder Study Room and two individual offices on the floor above. In June 2002 the Centre acquired from Trinity College the adjoining premises at No. 7 Cranmer Road which, following a major process of renovation, now contains eight ensuite bedrooms, a large communal kitchen, laundry facilities, a large individual office and a large conference style room. Both development projects were made possible thanks to generous funding from our benefactors and in particular Mrs Tom Finley, Dr Earl Snyder, Trinity College and the King of Bahrain. The Centre is enormously grateful to them all.

The Lauterpacht Centre was the beneficiary of several donations throughout the year, including a generous donation of £40,000 from Trinity College to put towards the construction of the link between the Centre’s two buildings.

The Lauterpacht Centre’s kitchen at No. 5 Cranmer Road was refitted over the 2005/6 Christmas period, converting it into a fully modern kitchen facility of benefit in particular to visiting fellows staying in the building and attendees at the Centre’s regular coffee mornings.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 5

Centre Library

The Centre’s library contains some 5000 materials, including pleadings, journals, reports and monographs. Most of the library’s materials have been donated, but the Centre maintains subscriptions to core international law journals. In 2006 the Centre’s library underwent reorganization in an effort to create more shelf space for its valuable and ever expanding collection of materials.

Generous donations of materials have been received throughout year, particularly from the visiting and senior fellows of the Centre. Notable acquisitions include:

` A complete 42 volume set of 'Trial of the major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal, Nuremberg, 14 November 1945 - 1 October 1946' ` A complete set of the Military Law and Law of War Review from the library of the late Gerald Draper, supplemented from Tony Roger’s own collection.

A number of visiting fellows kindly donated copies of books they had written, including:

` Whistleblowing around the world: law, culture and practice from Richard Calland ` Law and Politics in Ocean Governance: the UN Fish Stocks Agreement and Regional Fisheries Management Regimes from Tore Henriksen ` Corporations and Transnational Human Rights Litigation from Sarah Joseph ` Prior Consultation Procedures in International Environmental Law from Mari Koyano ` Australian Native Title Law from Melissa Perry ` Women, The Koran and International Human Rights Law from Niaz Shah

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Centre Publications

In affiliation with Cambridge University Press, the Lauterpacht Centre prepares, edits and sponsors a wide range of publications in international law, including texts and law reports. Reports published by the Centre itself are managed by Karen Lee, the Centre’s Publications Director with assistance from Tara Grant as Publications Assistant.

The International Law Reports are the only series wholly devoted to the regular and systematic reporting in English of decisions of international courts and arbitrators as well as judgments of national courts. It continues as the Centre’s major series, under the editorship of Sir Elihu Lauterpacht and Professor Christopher Greenwood, with Andrew Oppenheimer as Associate Editor and Karen Lee as Assistant Editor. The most recent volume published to date is volume 127, which appeared in 2006. Volume 128 is currently in production.

The ICSID Reports contain decisions rendered by arbitral tribunals and ad hoc committees set up within the framework of the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes established pursuant to the ICSID Convention and other related decisions. Volume 9 was published in February 2006 and volumes 10, 11, 12 are currently in press.

The International Environmental Law Reports series consists of five volumes. The first four volumes, Early Decisions, Trade and Environment, Human Rights and Environment, and International Environmental Law in National Courts, were published between 1999 and 2004. The final volume, International Environmental Law in International Tribunals, is currently in press and due to appear late Spring 2007.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 7

The Iran-US Claims Tribunal Reports series was initiated by the Centre, with the co-operation of the Tribunal Secretariat, to provide a permanent record of the decisions and awards of the Iran-US Claims Tribunal. Volumes 35, 36 and 37 were published during the academic year.

The Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law is a broad-based series of monographs in international and comparative law co-edited by John Bell and James Crawford. Initially started in 1946, it was renewed in 1994 and now features about fifty titles. Seven titles have been published in the last academic year:

` Bell, John, Judiciaries within Europe: a comparative review (No. 47) ` Lindblom, Anna-Karin, Non-Governmental Organizations in International Law (No. 43) ` Wheatley,Steven, Democracy, Minorities and International Law (No. 42) ` Khee-Jin Tan, Alan, Vessel-Source Marine Pollution (No. 45) ` Tams, Christian J, Enforcing Obligations Erga Omnes in International Law (No. 44) ` Delmas-Marty, Mireille and Spencer, John (eds.), European Criminal Procedures (No. 25) ` Provost, René, International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (No. 22)

Ten further volumes are currently in production and are due to be published in 2006/7.

The Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lecture Series started in 1983 and publishes studies based on the annual series of lectures given at the Centre by distinguished scholars and practitioners to commemorate the life and work of Sir Hersch Lauterpacht. There are currently 18 titles in the series, two of which were published this year:

` Jackson,John H, Sovereignty, the WTO and Changing Fundamentals of International Law

` Paulsson, Jan, Denial of Justice in International Law

Conferences & Meetings

The Centre is the venue for many meetings, formal and informal, from inside and outside the University. Inquiries on availability should be made first to Anita Rutherford ([email protected]).

The Foreign & Commonwealth Office International Law Course was again hosted by the Centre in September 2006. The week-long intensive international law course was chaired by Dame Audrey Glover CMG and the majority of participants were FCO diplomats. Course presenters included a number of members of the Centre and, as in previous years, the participants were warm in their praise for the Centre and the Course.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 8

Centre Lectures

This year’s lectures covered a wide range of topics. Friday lunchtime lectures included matters such as extraordinary rendition, terrorism and collective responsibility, the resolution of sporting disputes, multinational corporations and human rights and the ILC’s draft articles on diplomatic protection. The Thursday evening ‘conversation’ sessions involving participants from both sides of the Israel-Palestine issue were of particular note. Kendall Freeman Solicitors kindly undertook sponsorship of the accompanying sandwiches and lectures were well attended throughout the academic year. The lecture programme for the year appears as Appendix III.

The Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures entitled ‘American Legal Thinking and International Law: A French Perspective’ were given by Judge Jean-Pierre Cot of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea on 14, 15 and 16 February 2006. The lectures will be published by Cambridge University Press as part of the Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lecture Series. The 2006/7 Lauterpacht lectures will be given by Sir Michael Wood KCMG QC from 7–9 November 2006 on the subject of The UN Security Council and International Law.

The Snyder Lecture Programme was set up by Dr Earl Snyder to enable one speaker to travel either from Cambridge to the Bloomington School of Law at Indiana University or vice versa. On 23 March 2005 Dr Jillaine Seymour of Sidney Sussex College delivered the Snyder Lecture at the Bloomington School on the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea. As with previous Snyder Lectures, the lecture is published in the Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 9

Visiting Fellows & Scholars

A total of 36 visiting fellows and scholars came to the Centre in the 2005/06 academic year. Visits ranged from a few weeks to the maximum two-year visit. The additional facilities provided by Bahrain House meant that a significant number of the Centre’s visiting fellows stayed at No. 7 Cranmer Road. The list of visiting fellows and scholars for the academic year appears as Appendix I.

Throughout the year visiting fellows and scholars held weekly closed sessions, presenting research and providing a forum for discussion and debate. A list of presentations held in 2006 during these sessions appears as Appendix II.

In addition to their high levels of academic endeavour, the visiting fellows organized several informal social events throughout the year, including a world cup party, a Eurovision party and several summer barbeques, contributing to the Centre’s lively atmosphere.

The 2005/6 Snyder Visiting Scholarship was awarded to Carmen Brun of the Indiana University School of Law to research the legal ramifications of Equator Principle. Carmen actively involved herself in all aspects of life at the Centre and, on completing her research, began practising at a law firm in Washington DC.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 10

Centre Staff

Anne Skinner was Centre Administrator until she retired on 31 May 2006. Anne came to the Centre in October 1997 and has been one of its focal points, welcoming the hundreds of visitors to the Centre, maintaining and developing the fabric of the Centre and helping in a myriad of ways.

Anita Rutherford took over as Centre Administrator in September 2006 following Anne’s retirement, having worked previously at the University’s Medical School. As Centre Administrator, Anita is one of the Centre’s first points of contact for enquiries.

Katie Hargreaves worked initially as the Centre's Secretary and then as Acting Administrator following Anne Skinner’s retirement. Katie left the Centre at the end of August 2006 to pursue a career in teaching. A new Centre Secretary will be appointed at the beginning of the next academic year.

Karen Lee has been Publications Director at the Centre since 2002 and is a Fellow of the Centre and of Girton College. As well as being responsible for the editorial management of the Centre's publications, she is assistant editor of the International Law Reports, co-editor of the ICSID Reports and editor of the Iran-US Claims Tribunal Reports.

Tara Grant, as the Centre’s Publications Assistant, works closely with Karen Lee and is responsible for the day-today running of the Centre’s library and website. She has a BA in publishing and information and gained a postgraduate diploma in law whilst working for law firms in London and Cambridge. She is the first point of contact for library and website enquiries.

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Fellows & Long‐term Associates

Dr John Barker is a Fellow of Hughes Hall and has been a Fellow of the Centre since 1999. He is the Chairman of the UK Foreign Compensation Commission and a member of the FCO Expert Panel on the Rule of Law. He has been advising international development agencies, such as the EU, UNDP and DFID, and NGOs, such as WWF, to promote good governance and legal reform in countries in transition, particularly in Africa.

Michelle Bradfield is a Research Fellow of the Centre who works primarily as a Research Assistant to Sir Elihu Lauterpacht engaged in both his professional and academic work. Much of her time has been spent on the proceedings of the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission, of which Sir Elihu is the President. Michelle has also assisted with research related to the biography of the late Sir Hersch Lauterpacht. In the summer she attended the public international law course at The Hague Academy of International Law with the assistance of an International Law Fund scholarship.

Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger is a Fellow of the Centre and Director of the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law in Montreal, Canada. She provides legal advice on the implementation of international sustainable development treaties to the and to governments in Africa, Asia and Latin America. She is an instructor of international law for the International Development Law Organization, chairs the International Law on Sustainable Development Partnership under the auspices of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development and lectures in sustainable development for several law faculties around the world. She has authored or edited over fifty publications, including eight books.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 12

Dr Joanna Gomula is a Fellow of the Centre, working in the field of WTO law. She continues to be associated with Queen Mary College, University of London, where she teaches international economic law and WTO dispute settlement. In 2005/6 she taught courses of WTO law at University of Hong Kong and the Diplomatic Academy in Vienna and was the major speaker at a conference on WTO accession in Doneck, Ukraine. Joanna also spoke at a conference on treaty interpretation organized by Queen Mary College in London.

Dr Tom Grant is a Research Fellow of the Centre. He supervises in international law at both Tripos and graduate level for the Centre of International Studies. Over the past year he has worked on matters of statehood in international law and served as general editor of a comparative law study of political campaign finance law in various States. His research interests include the application of human rights and humanitarian law to internal armed conflict; criteria for membership of States in international organizations; and international dispute settlement.

Karen Lee is a Fellow of the Centre and a Law Fellow of Girton College in the University of Cambridge. She is a law graduate of the University of Cambridge (BA, MA) and has supervised in European Union law at undergraduate level for a number of colleges. She was appointed Centre Publications Director in 2002 and edits a number of the Centre’s law reports.

Penelope Nevill is a Fellow of the Centre and a Law Fellow of Downing College in the University of Cambridge. Before moving to Downing she was a Research Fellow at the Centre (2003-2005). She is a graduate of the Universities of Auckland (BA, LLB) and Cambridge (LLM) and a Barrister and Solicitor of the High Court of New Zealand. She supervises in the areas of international law and European Union law at undergraduate level and her areas of interest include developments in international commercial law and the responsibility to protect.

Kate Parlett was a Research Fellow of the Centre from November 2005 to September 2006. She is admitted to practise as a Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Queensland and the High Court of Australia. Kate assisted Professor James Crawford with various projects, including an edited collection on State Responsibility. Kate left the Centre in September 2006 to commence a PhD at Cambridge.

Major General (ret’d) Tony Rogers OBE became a fellow of the Centre in 1999 following his retirement in 1997 from the post of director of the UK Army Legal Services and is now a Senior Fellow. He teaches the law of armed conflict in the Cambridge LLM course and was conferred with the title of Yorke Distinguished Visiting Fellow by the Law Faculty in 2003. He is a Vice- President of the International Fact-Finding Commission and became chairman of the UK Group of the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War in 2005. Tony writes extensively on the law of armed conflict. He was the general editor of the Ministry of Defence Manual on the Law of Armed Conflict and is currently writing a student book on the subject.

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk 13

Sandesh Sivakumaran was a Research Fellow at the Centre working on a range of projects with Daniel Bethlehem. He received his BA from Cambridge and his LLM from . He has worked at the International Court of Justice and at the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda. He is the author of a number of articles in the areas of international human rights, humanitarian law and criminal law. Sandy left the Centre in August 2006 to take up a lectureship in international law at Nottingham University.

Dr Guglielmo Verdirame is a lecturer in International Law at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of the Centre. He is co-author of Rights in Exile (2005) and writes on various aspects of international law, including human rights, international economic law, use of force and non- proliferation, and international criminal law. He has taught Foundations of International Law, International Human Rights Law and International Economic Law on the LLM and undergraduate International Law courses. In the summer of 2006, he was director of studies in public international law at the Hague Academy of International Law. He will be on sabbatical leave at Harvard Law School for most of 2007 where he hopes to complete a book on UN Accountability and to begin work on a new project on the idea of liberty in international law.

Dr Marc Weller is an Assistant Director of Studies at the Centre for International Studies where he teaches the course in International Constitutional Law. He is the project director of the Cambridge-Carnegie project on the resolution of complex self-determination disputes through power-sharing arrangements and a Fellow of Hughes Hall.

Samuel Wordsworth is a Fellow of the Centre and a barrister at Essex Court Chambers, London. He lectures at King’s College London on investment arbitration, and is a Member of the French Bar. He specialises primarily in international and commercial law.

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Senior & Honorary Fellows

The appointment to Senior Fellow of the Centre was officially recognized in the 2005/6 academic year and is awarded in recognition of eminence in the field of international law combined with significant involvement in the Centre itself:

` Lord Mustill ` Mr Jan Paulsson

` Major General (ret’d) Tony Rogers OBE ` Sir Michael Wood KCMG

The Centre also has a number of distinguished Honorary Fellows appointed by reason of their standing in international law or their significant contribution to the development of the Centre:

` Professor Sir Derek Bowett QC ` Mrs William T Finley Jnr

` HE Judge Dame Rosalyn Higgins QC ` HE Judge Hisashi Owada

` HE Judge Stephen M Schwebel ` Sir Arthur Watts KCMG QC

Management Committee

The Centre is very grateful to members who served on the Management Committee during the past year:

` Professor Sir John Baker (Chair) ` Mr Daniel Bethlehem

` Professor James Crawford ` Mrs Cherry Hopkins OBE

` Professor Sir Elihu Lauterpacht ` Ms Penelope Nevill

` Dr Roger O’Keefe ` Dr Guglielmo Verdirame

` Dr Marc Weller

Professor James Crawford SC FBA Director

30 September 2006

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE for INTERNATIONAL LAW ● 5 Cranmer Road Cambridge CB3 9BL ● tel: ++ 44 (0)1223 335 358 ● email: [email protected] ● web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk Appendix I Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law Visiting Fellows/Scholars 1 October 2005 – 30 September 2006

Name Place of Origin Period of Stay Research Topic

Dr Giulio Bartolini University of “Roma Tre” 1 Oct – 15 Dec 06 The right to reparation for violations of human rights

Dr David Berry University of the West Indies, Barbados Sept 06 – May 07 Towards a democratic conception of sovereignty

Dr Sharif Bhuiyan Bangladesh April – 7 Jul 06 National law in WTO law

Ms Carmen Brun Snyder Scholar, Indiana University School of Law Sept 05 – Dec 05 The legal ramifications of the Equator Principle

Mr Richard Calland South Africa 10 Oct – 15 Mar 06 Transparency and accountability in the international financial institutions

Dr Sonia Cardenas Trinity College, Hartford, USA June 2006 National human rights institutions worldwide

Mr Phil Chan Hong Kong 1 July – 16 Sept 06 Trade and human rights in EU-China relations

Dr Sudhir Chopra University of the West Indies, Bahamas 06 Sep – 30 Sept 05 Environmental law of the Antarctic

Ms Emily Crawford Australia 20 Sep – 25 Oct 06 International humanitarian law – the case for the unification of the law of armed conflict

Ms Alison Duxbury University of Melbourne 30 Jan – May 06 The role of human rights and democracy in determining the participation of states in international organizations

Dr Caroline Foster School of Law, Auckland 01 May – 23 Jun 06 Adjudication of international disputes involving scientific uncertainty

Dr Ralph Gillis USA Oct 04 – 14 May 06 Application of public right to navigation in context of territorial sea jurisdictional evolution

Prof John Martin Gillroy Lehigh University, USA Easter Terms International law as Hegelian dialectic: towards a synthesis of justice and order 2006 - 2011

Prof Carmen G Gonzalez Seattle University School of Law Sept – Dec 06 Tensions and contradictions among economic development, environmental protection and food security in the developing world

Mr Milinda Gunetilleke Hamilton Shirley Amerasinghe Memorial Fellowship, Sri Sept 05 – 3 Mar 06 Law of the sea Lanka

Prof Mika Hayashi Kobe University, Mar 05 – Dec 05 Disarmament law

Mr Paul Hayes Australia 18 Oct 05 – 8 Mar 06 International sporting dispute resolution: public/private international law framework?

Dr Tore Henriksen University of Tromsoe, Norway 15 Aug 05 – 31 Jul 06 Law of the sea

Appendix I Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law Visiting Fellows/Scholars 1 October 2005 – 30 September 2006

Name Place of Origin Period of Stay Research Topic

Mr Wai Loon Calvin Ho Singapore 05 Dec 05 – 5 Jan 06 International human rights

Prof Sarah Joseph Monash University, Australia 6 Feb – 10 Jul 06 WTO and human rights

Prof Teruo Komori Hokkaido University, Japan 1 Apr – 25 Sept 06 The public policy aspects of international law and the unity of the diversified implementation processes

Mrs Mari Koyano University of Shizuoka 3 Aug – 18 Sept 06 International law and international environmental law

Mr Gil Limon Hebrew University of Jerusalem 7 Jul – 30 Oct 06 The interrelations between international legal regimes applicable to the struggle against terrorism

Ms Yuko Minami Tsuda College, Tokyo, Japan 01 Apr 05 – 31 Mar 06 Environmental impact assessment as the procedural regulation concerning the domestic implementation of international law

Mr Andrew Mitchell Melbourne Law School 09 Jul – 23 Jul 06 Legal principles in WTO disputes

Mr Promod Nair High Court of Karnataka and National School of Law, India 19 Jun – 19 Aug 06 The application of international law by Indian Courts

Ms Therese O’Donnell Strathclyde University Mar – Jun 06 Research on the issues surrounding the restitution of Nazi looted art

Ms Nwamaka Okany University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands 6 Mar – 29 May 06 International State responsibility for the conduct of entities exercising governmental authority

Dr Melissa Perry QC University of Adelaide, Australia 09 Dec 05 – Mar 06 State succession and boundaries

Mr Martin Schaub Zurich University Jan – Dec 06 National jurisdiction over multinational corporations

Dr Thomas Schultz University of Dec 05 – Nov 06 The facilitation of dispute resolution procedures for digital copyright issues

Prof Mortimer Sellers University of Baltimore Dec 05 – 1 Jul 06 The foundations of international law

Dr Niaz A Shah The Queen’s University, Belfast Jan – Dec 06 Self-defence in Islamic and international law: assessing Al-Qaeda and the Iraq War

Prof M N Shaw Leicester University 10 Jan –Jan 06 Territory and international law

Dr Elizabeth van Sliedregt Utrecht University, The Netherlands Jan – 1 Apr 06 The presumption of innocence in an era of terror

Mr Jianli Song China 6 Oct 05 –1 Mar 06 Judicial protection on human rights – comparative research of western countries & China

Appendix II

Lauterpacht Centre for International Law

Visiting Fellows Presentations – 2006

Date Presenter Topic

18 Jan Dr Tore Henriksen High Seas & Unregulated Fisheries 25 Jan. Sandy Sivakumaran Binding Armed Opposition Groups by the Rules Governing Internal Armed Conflicts 1 Feb Dr Niaz Ali Shah Mian Terrorism and Jihad 8 Feb Paul Hayes International Law and Sport 23 Feb Dr Melissa Perry QC State Succession & Boundaries 2 Mar Dr Elies van Sliedregt Criminal Responsibility for Genocide 8 Mar Alison Duxbury The Role of Human Rights and Democracy 2 May Nwamaka Okany Attribution to the State of the Conduct of Public, Semi-Public and Private Persons Exercising Governmental Functions 10 May Prof Sarah Joseph The WTO, Poverty and Development 16 May Prof Teruo Komori An Idea for the Reconstruction of the Theory of Customary International Law 23 May Martin Schaub National jurisdiction over multinational enterprises 1 June Dr Thomas Schultz Carving up the Internet 13 June Prof Mortimer N. Sellers The Foundations of International Law 20 June Prof John M Gillroy Justice-As-Sovereignty: David Hume’s Philosophical-Politics Applied To The Origins of International Law 14 July Phil C W Chan Taiwan's Claim to Statehood Re-Examined 28 July Promod Nair The Role of Courts in a System of National and International Commercial Arbitration: The Indian Experience 11 Aug Martin Schaub National jurisdiction over multinational enterprises 1 Sept Phil C W Chan Civil partnership registration under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations and the European Convention on Human Rights 8 Sept Gil Limon The Interrelations between International Legal Regimes which are Applicable to the Struggle against Terrorism

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Lauterpacht Centre Appendix III LECTURE PROGRAMME – ACADEMIC YEAR 2005/6 for International Law

Friday 7 October “Reforming the United Nations?” Professor Nico Schrijver, University of Leiden; formerly of the Office of the UN Legal Counsel, New York

Friday 14 October “Reflections on International Adjudication and Arbitration” Judge Stephen M. Schwebel, former President of the International Court of Justice;

Friday 21 October “Issues for a Legal Adviser, British Embassy Baghdad” Mr Andrew Hood, Assistant Legal Adviser, Foreign & Commonwealth Office

Friday 28 October “Challenging the Executive: How to Use International Law in English Courts” Shaheed Fatima, Blackstone Chambers; author of Using International Law in Domestic Courts (2005)

Friday 4 November “Current Issues in International Humanitarian Law: POW Status and the Dr Knut Dörmann, Deputy Head, Legal Division, International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva Conduct of Hostilities”

Friday 11 November “Investigating Alleged Human Rights Atrocities: A Forensic Scientist’s Dr Helena Ranta, Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Helsinki; Coordinator, Disaster Victim Perspective” Identification and International Missions Unit; sometime UN/EU appointed forensic investigator

Thurs 17 November “The Israeli-Palestinian Dispute: Historical Perspectives & Visions of the Ġhaith Al-Omari, Assistant Chief of Staff and Advisor to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas; formerly, Future” Legal Adviser, Palestinian Negotiations Support Unit; and Daniel Reisner, Attorney, Tel Aviv; formerly Head of International Law, Israeli Military AG’s Office

Friday 18 November “The International Law Commission’s Draft Articles on Diplomatic Professor John Dugard, University of Leiden; Special Rapporteur of the International Law Commission on Protection” Diplomatic Protection

Thurs 24 November “The Israeli-Palestinian Dispute: Visions of the Future and How to Yair Hirschfeld, Economic Cooperation Foundation; sometime Oslo Accords negotiator; and Get There” Ahmad Khalidi, Senior Associate Member, St Anthony’s College Oxford; sometime adviser to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas

Friday 25 November “International Peacekeeping Operations: Problems and Prospects” Stephen Mathias, Legal Counsel, Multinational Force and Observers; formerly, Assistant Legal Adviser for United Nations Affairs, US Department of State, Washington

Friday 20 January “War, Terrorism and Collective Responsibility” Dr Mark Reiff, University of Durham

Friday 27 January “Resolving Territorial and Boundary Disputes Through Adjudication” Professor Marcelo Kohen, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva

Friday 03 February “Prosecuting Violations of the Laws of Armed Conflict” Nick Kaufman, former Trial Attorney, Office of the Prosecutor, ICTY

Friday 10 February “Politics, Energy Security and Pipelines: the Recent Russian Experience” Chris Flynn, Solicitor, Public International Group, Ashursts, London

Tues – Thurs Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures: Judge Jean-Pierre Cot, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea 14 – 16 February “American Legal Thinking and International Law: A French Perspective”

Friday 17 February “American Legal Thinking and International Law: A French Perspective” : Judge Jean-Pierre Cot, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea a discussion, following Judge Cot’s Lauterpacht Lectures

Friday 24 February “Extraordinary Rendition – Politics and Law at the Sharp End” Mark Pallis, Adviser to the All Party Parliamentary Group on Extraordinary Renditions

Thursday 2 March “The Creation of States Revisited” – to mark the publication of the Professor James Crawford, Whewell Professor of International Law, Cambridge second edition of Professor Crawford’s celebrated book

Friday 3 March “The Judgment of the International Court of Justice in the Case Concerning Professor Pierre Klein, Professor of International Law, Université libre de Bruxelles; Counsel to the DRC Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (DRC v. Uganda)”

Friday 10 March “The New Game: International Law and the Resolution of Sporting Disputes” Paul J. Hayes, Barrister, Melbourne, Australia; Visiting Fellow, LRCIL

Friday 28 April “What Went Wrong in Eureko v. Poland” Mr Zachary Douglas, University College London and Matrix Chambers

Friday 5 May “Multinational Corporations and Human Rights” Professor Sarah Joseph, Monash University, Australia; Visiting Fellow, LRCIL

LAUTERPACHT CENTRE FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 5 Cranmer Road, Cambridge, CB3 9BL, UK Tel: +44 (0)1223 335 358; Fax: +44 (0)1223 300 406 Web: http://lcil.law.cam.ac.uk/ E-mail: Mrs Anne Skinner (Administrator) – [email protected]