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Justice
in Profile
Hassan Bubacar Jallow
(The Gambia)
Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda;
Prosecutor, International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals
In the late 1990s there was a need at the United Nations for
a thorough report to the U.N.
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International
Tribunal Spotlight
International Court of Arbitration
The International Court of Arbitration is one of the oldest
international dispute resolution organizations in the world.
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100 Ways
International Law: One Hundred Ways It
Shapes Our Lives
Having a safer food supply and being able to buy food
products that are safer to use and not harmful to human health.
By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International
Judicial Monitor, and President, International Judicial Academy
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Leading Figures in International Law
Henry James Sumner Maine (United Kingdom)
(1822-1888)
By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International
Judicial Monitor and President.l International Judicial Academy
When he was 39 years old, in 1861, Henry James Sumner Maine
published a collection of lectures he had delivered at the University of
Cambridge, where he was a professor of civil law, and at one of the inns of
court in London.
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Editorial |
About Judicial Qualifications, Judicial Backgrounds, and
Judicial Appointments
By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International
Judicial Monitor and President, International Judicial Academy
Recently a popular magazine in the United States (print version)
that publishes articles on a variety of topics that are or should be of
interest and concern to the general populace featured in its “Dispatches: Ideas
and Provocations” section an excellent commentary about the Supreme Court of
the United States.
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Special Report –
Special to the International Judicial Monitor |
Taking Politics to the
Courtroom: The Croatia v Serbia Genocide Case
By: Iva Vukusic,
International Judicial Monitor Correspondent in The Hague
A long expensive process
that was the Croatia v
Serbia genocide case at the International Court of Justice in The Hague ended recently and no significant
positive outcomes for the two countries can be easily identified.
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Special Report –
Special to the International Judicial Monitor |
Justice the Kosovo Way: An American Judge’s Very Brief
Retrospective
on Serving as a Judge in the Kosovo Trial Courts
By: Senior Judge James Hargreaves
In the fall of 2013 I was selected by the US Department of
State and the European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo (EULEX) to serve as
a trial judge in the Major Crimes Department of the Basic Court (trial court)
of Kosovo, in the city of Mitrovica in the north of the country.
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Historic
Moments in International Law |
Disputation on the Frontier
By: Stephen
C. Neff, Reader in Law – Public International Law, University of Edinburgh Law
School
The frontier in question is not the American wild west –
though it was wild enough in its own way.
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Global Judicial Perspective |
The Great Charter Celebration
By: Richard A. Goldstone, Former Justice, Constitutional Court of South Africa, First Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia, and Regular Columnist, International Judicial Monitor
The high point in celebrating the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta took
place at Runnymede, some 20 miles from the center of London, where on June 5,
1215, King John sealed the Great Charter.
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Hague Happenings |
Wrapping Things Up: The
Last Days of the ICTY
By: Iva Vukusic,
International Judicial Monitor Correspondent in The Hague
Since its
establishment twenty-two years ago by the Security Council of the United
Nations (Resolution 827),
the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) has been a groundbreaking institution.
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Private International Law
Discourse |
The Principle of Good Faith in International
Contract Law
By Carolyn A. Dubay, Associate Editor, International Judicial
Monitor and Assistant Professor of Law, Charlotte Law School
Like public international law, international private law
includes a number of general principles that manifest themselves in customary
law (such as the lex mercatoria) and in international instruments.
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In
Review: Recent Publications on International and Comparative Law and About Judges and Courts |
Justice Among Nations: A History of International Law
By: Stephen C. Neff. Harvard University Press. 2014
Reviewed by: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International
Judicial Monitor and President, International Judicial Academy
In the first one and a half decades of the 21st Century international law has not been a subject of interest in the United
States or elsewhere in the world among the general populace or even in more
sophisticated circles populated by judges, lawyers, political scientists and
politicians.
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