International Judicial Monitor
Published by the International Judicial Academy, Washington, D.C., with assistance from the
American Society of International Law

Summer 2017 Issue

Lady Justice Brenda Hale Chosen to Lead U.K. Supreme Court

Lady Justice Brenda Hale  

By: James G. Apple
Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom announced on July 21 the selection of Lady Justice Brenda Hale as the President of the Court. She was previously Deputy President of the Court. She has been a member of the Supreme Court since the Court was created in 2009 to replace the House of Lords Law Committee, which had served as the highest court in the U.K since the 16th Century.. Before the creation of the Supreme Court Lady Justice Hale was a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (Law Lord) having been appointed to that position in 2004.

Justices of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and other judges are selected by an independent Judicial Selections Commission.

Three other appointments to the Supreme Court were also announced. Judge Jill Black of the Court of Appeal was elevated to the supreme bench, becoming the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court. David Lloyd Jones and Michael Briggs were also selected for service on the Court.

Lady Justice Hale has long been an outspoken advocate for more women in the judiciary. She has also been a proponent of more diversity in the judiciary. She can serve in her new position until she reaches age 75 because she became a judge before the rules were changed to require judges to retire at age 70. She is currently age 72.

Both Lady Justice Hale and Lady Justice Black are experts in family law.

Justice Hale was born in Yorkshire, England and educated in Richmond. She attended Girton College, University of Cambridge where she studied law and graduated with first class honors. She was called to the Bar by Gray’s Inn in 1969. She was a professor of law at the University of Manchester for many years and in 1989 was appointed Queen’s Counsel.

Her first judicial appointment was as a Recorder (part time judge) in 1989. Five years later she was promoted to the Family Court of the High Court of Justice. In another five years she was appointed to the Court of Appeal, becoming only the second woman to be selected for that court (with such appointment she became a member of the Privy Council).

Lady Justice Hale has been awarded honorary degrees from the University of Salsford, the University of Reading, and the University of Glasgow.


Lexis/Nexis Top 25 Blogs Logo
Sergio Moro Justice in Profile
Sergio Moro, Judge (Brazil)
By: James G. Apple,  Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

One of the more consistent political issues that has plagued Brazil over the past decade has been corruption, apparently centered in the executive branch, but seemingly spilling over into the judicial branch. Judges, even some at the highest levels, have not been immune from charges of corruption in their judicial duties.
(Read More »)
   
ECOWAS
International Tribunal Spotlight
ECOWAS Community Court of Justice
By: James G. Apple,  Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), an organization of 15 West African countries, was established in May, 1975. (Read More »)

   
100 Ways
100 Ways
International Law: One Hundred Ways It Shapes Our Lives

Mailing a letter reliably and easily to anyone in the world.

By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

The idea of a viable postal service existing in our modern world, considering the dominance of electronic mail and social networks available as a means of communication, seems irrational.
(Read More »)

   
Iva Vukusi
Hague Happenings
Prosecuting Former Child Soldiers: the Case of Dominic Ongwen at the ICC

By: Iva Vukusic, International Judicial Monitor Correspondent in The Hague

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has been hearing one of its most interesting cases yet, against a former child soldier from northern Uganda, accused of perpetrating crimes similar to those he had suffered himself. (Read More »)

 
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Editorial

The Need for Speaking Out
By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

I subscribe to several U.S. magazines, and receive others as a result of memberships in organizations. I find them valuable, as they fill the gap between daily journalism offerings found in newspapers, and books which come along months or years after a particular event or movement.
(Read More »)

  Dr. James G. Apple
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Historic Moments in International Law

Profiting from War:  The Law and Practice of Medieval Prisoner Ransom
By: Stephen  C.  Neff, Reader in Law – Public International Law, University of Edinburgh Law School

The valiant Achilles – that paragon of Greek warrior-heroes – is not ordinarily associated with economic entrepreneurship or war profiteering. (Read More »)

 
Stephen C. Neff
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Special Report

Power of the Purse: A Macro-Survey of Recent Financing at International Criminal
Courts and Tribunals with Special Emphasis on the International Criminal Court
By: Jim Ransdell, Law Clerk, U.S. Court of International Trade; LL.M. Public International Law, Leiden University

Since 2009, seven international or ‘hybrid’ criminal tribunals have opened or closed. International criminal law’s institutional landscape is thus in great flux. (Read More »)

  Jim Ransdell
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Judicial Tourism

The Hague: Growing to Become the International Law Center of the World
By: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

The Hague is not a prominent destination for tourists and travelers outside of the European Union. It has a robust tourist industry, but statistics show that most of the visitors come from Belgium, Germany and France. (Read More »)

 

The Hague

 

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Global Judicial Perspective

The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic
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

On August 22, 2011 the United Nations Human Rights Council established The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic. (Read More »)

  Richard A. Goldstone
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Special Report

The IIIM: A Justice Experiment in Geneva
By: Iva Vukusic, International Judicial Monitor Correspondent in The Hague

Faced with growing frustration over inaction about the widespread violations of international law taking place in Syria in the past six years, in December 2016, the United Nations General Assembly did something unusual.
(Read More »)

 

Iva Vukusic

 

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Leading Figures in International Law

John Peters Humphrey, Lawyer
Canada

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted after the conference that produced the Charter of the United Nations, is usually associated with Eleanor Roosevelt, member of the United States delegation to the UN organizing assembly.
(Read More »)

 
John Peters Humphrey
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In Review: Books About International Law and About Courts and Judges

Federal Judges Revealed
By: William Domnarski
Oxford University Press. 2009

Reviewed by: James G. Apple, Editor-in-Chief, International Judicial Monitor

The lives of judges, including the private or personal lives as well as their legal ones, are not the frequent subjects of authors. While commentaries about judicial duties appear from time to time, private judicial lives are hidden behind a legal curtain. (Read More »)

  Federal Judges Revealed
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ASIl & International Judicial AcademyInternational Judicial Monitor
© 2017 – The International Judicial Academy
with assistance from the American Society of International Law.

Editor: James G. Apple.
IJM welcomes comments, suggestions, and submissions.
Please contact the IJM editor at ijaworld@verizon.net.