Showing posts with label International Law Students Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Law Students Association. Show all posts

Go On! ILW 2010

(Go On! is an occasional item on symposia and other events of interest)

The 89th annual meeting of the American Branch of the International Law Association will be held October 21 through 23 in New York City.
The theme of International Law Weekend 2010 is International Law and Institutions: Advancing Justice, Security and Prosperity.
Topics listed on the Schedule of Events include many on which IntLawGrrls have posted; for example:
Kosovo advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice
► International Criminal Court post-Kampala
► Climate change
► Lisbon Treaty of the European Union
► International child abduction
► Corporate social responsibility
► International development law
► Targeted killing
Co-Chairs of this year's meeting are Professor Elizabeth Burleson (far left) of the University of South Dakota Law School, Hanna Dreifeldt Lainé (near left) of the U.N. Office of Legal Affairs, Vincent J. Vitkowsky, a partner at the New York law firm Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge, and ILSA Program Coordinator Jill Schmieder Hereau.
All attendees are encouraged to preregister for space reasons. Registration is free to members of ABILA, the International Law Students Association and the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, and of the many cosponsoring entities, such as the American Society of International Law, whose President, our colleague David D. Caron, will give a keynote address. For persons not members of such groups, the registration fee is $75.
Further details here.

Go On! International Law Weekend 2008

(Go On! is an occasional item on symposia of interest.) International Law Weekend 2008 will be held October 16-18, 2008, at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, 42 West 44th Street, New York City. The Weekend's overall theme is The United States and International Law: Legal Traditions and Future Possibilities. The lead-off panel on Thursday, October 16, at 6:30 p.m., entitled A New Presidency: A New U.S. Policy at the U.N.?, will include Republican and Democratic strategists and academic commentators. The keynote speaker at the annual luncheon on Friday, October 17, at 12:30 p.m. will be John Bellinger, the Legal Adviser to the U.S. Department of State. That Friday evening, the Annual Gala Reception will be hosted by the Permanent Representative of Belgium to the United Nations. The ILW 2008 Program will also feature over thirty other panels, addressing topics relating to international trade and investment, international adjudication and arbitration, human rights, international law in U.S. courts, generation of international law, transitional justice and international criminal law, and the international environment. To view the complete ILW schedule and to register for the conference, please visit the websites of the American Branch of the International Law Association or the International Law Students Association.

An ILSA 1st: President Leila Nadya Sadat

Delighted to announce that by unanimous agreement the International Law Students Association's selected our colleague, Leila Nadya Sadat (left), as its new President. She becomes the 1st woman to head ILSA, the Chicago-based international organization best known for running the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition.
Leila is the Henry H. Oberschelp Professor of Law at the Washington University School of Law and Director of the Whitney R. Harris Institute of Global Legal Studies, both in St. Louis, Missouri. She specializes in international criminal law and human rights. She served as a delegate to the 1998 diplomatic conference at which the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court was adopted, and also as a member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
Thanks for the tip are due our colleague Mark E. Wojcik of The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, who's just launched the latest addition to the blogosphere, International Law Prof Blog (along with the new Netherlands-based ECHR Blog, profiled here). Joining Mark are Cindy Galway Buys, law professor at Southern Illinois University, and Michael A. Peil, Assistant Dean at Wash. U. Welcome!
And to Leila, heartfelt congratulations!

Notes from "The Jessup"

A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to travel to Washington D.C. to compete in the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. Joined by students on over 100 teams from 80 countries, it was truly an incredible experience shared by all.
The Jessup Competition originated at Harvard Law School in 1960, with American students arguing against foreign LLM students on the topic of Cuban Agrarian Reform. The Competition quickly internationalized, and now over 120 countries and special jurisdictions have sent teams to participate. It is currently administered by the International Law Students Association (ILSA).
Use of force in response to international terrorism was the subject of this year’s problem. Set around a series of attacks that spawned the victim nation to violate the territorial sovereignty of a neighboring state to apprehend the suspects, later subjecting them to detention and questionable treatment, and ultimately trial by military commission, the questions were challenging to say the least. Students considered the interplay between humanitarian and human rights law -- testing the bounds and applicability of the Geneva Conventions to terrorist activities, as well as the reach of the Convention Against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
I had the pleasure of facing off against teams from Iceland, India, Mexico, and the United States. I especially respect the international teams for arguing flawlessly in English, which for many of them is a second (or third or fourth) language. The two finalist teams in this year’s competition were Case Western Reserve University of the United States and the University of New South Wales of Australia. Both teams, each of which fielded one female oralist, argued beautifully. In a close decision, Case Western won the Jessup Cup.
The Jessup is more than a moot court competition, however. It is a wonderful way to meet students and practitioners from every corner of the globe interested in international law. To this end, the Jessup provides ample social events, including the “Go National Ball” to which attendees come dressed in their traditional national attire, parties in D.C. clubs, and a formal gala at the close of the event. By the end of the week, I think it’s safe to say we were all friends and colleagues, not competitors.
Participants were also invited to attend the ILSA and ASIL conferences that were held during the same week – a great way to learn about the hottest issues in international law.
Jessup participants tend to be a loyal, if not a fanatical bunch. “Friends of the Jessup” describe the experience as creating a “fraternity of legal professionals, new and old, converged to build bonds and share an invaluable cultural and academic exchange.” I have to say I agree. Groups are popping up all over Facebook with themes like “Free Samara Penza” (the fictional leader of the alleged terrorist organization in this year’s problem). I am online “friends” with hundreds of other Jessup participants.
But perhaps the most important take-away from this year’s competition is that there are now thousands of soon-to-be practicing attorneys all over the world well-versed in the legal issues surrounding the War on Terror. This new generation of lawyers, although from incredibly diverse backgrounds and with divergent political views, are competent to uphold the rule of international law, despite the threats each of their nations may face. Irrespective of competition results, that in itself is a huge achievement.

Northern California's own Fantastic 4

Kudos to Sumaira Arastu, Michael Djavakhyan, Kathleen Doty, and Jimmy McBirney, the advocacy team that dazzled judges in Santa Clara this weekend to win the Western Super-Regional round of the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition!
Am proud to have had the honor a couple weeks ago of mooting this Fantastic 4, all students at my home institution, the University of California, Davis, School of Law (Martin Luther King, Jr., Hall). They're now preparing for the "world championship Shearman & Sterling International Rounds" April 6-12, 2008, at the Fairmont Hotel in Washington, D.C. -- same time and place at this year's annual meeting of the American Society of International Law. ASIL's a cosponsor of this tournament, founded 49 years ago in honor of Philip Caryl Jessup (1897–1986), whose lifetime of work in international law included a decade of service as a judge on the International Court of Justice. It's a model ICJ, of course, before which Jessup competitors present their arguments. Other cosponsors include the International Law Students Association, the American Branch of the International Law Association, and the American Bar Association Section of International Law.
What propelled Sumaira, Michael, Kate, and Jimmy to victory? How did they master an incredibly complex problem of international and transnational criminal law? Sorry, dare not give away secrets mid-contest.
Heartfelt congratulations, and best of luck to all who'll compete in D.C. next month!
 
Bloggers Team