Public International Law Discussion Group (Part I) and Annual Global Justice Lectures
Un podcast de Oxford University
33 Épisodes
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The Crime of Aggression
Publié: 05/05/2015 -
Reflections on Four Decades of International Action against Torture
Publié: 10/04/2015 -
Protecting Schools in Conflict: Developing International Guidelines
Publié: 10/04/2015 -
Causation in the Law of State Responsibility
Publié: 10/04/2015 -
Controlling International Organizations: Between Function and Virtue?
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
Arbitrary Detention in International Law
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
'A problem of interpretation': The ICJ's approach to the constituent instruments of international organizations
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
The UN's obligation to investigate disappearances and killings in Kosovo: the work of the Kosovo Human Rights Advisory Panel
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
Rule of Law at the international level - still relevant?
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
Independence referendums and putative citizenship - the Scottish referendum in a global perspective
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
Whose Convention is it anyway? Addressing the facts and myths around the Human Rights Act
Publié: 11/12/2014 -
The International Court of Justice's Approach to Injuries Suffered by Individuals
Publié: 21/05/2014 -
The effect of investment treaty arbitration on WTO dispute settlement: Tobacco plain packaging disputes and beyond
Publié: 21/05/2014 -
Lecture III: Law in Globalization
Publié: 21/05/2014 -
Lecture II: Law of Globalization
Publié: 21/05/2014 -
Are Arbitrators Political?
Publié: 01/04/2014 -
Whaling: the Gordian knot of animal rights and cultural diversity
Publié: 01/04/2014 -
Trashed, or treasured? Which will be the fate of international dispute resolution?
Publié: 01/04/2014 -
Culture Clashes in International Criminal Law
Publié: 01/04/2014 -
Do Dead Civilians have Human Rights? International Legal Obligations towards Civilian Casualties in Armed Conflict
Publié: 01/04/2014
Lectures on international law issues by eminent scholars, practitioners and judges of national and international courts. The lecture series is brought to you by the Public International Law Discussion Group, part of the Law Faculty of the University of Oxford, and is supported by the British Branch of the International Law Association and Oxford University Press. Further details of this series can be found on the Public International Law at Oxford website. The Oxford Global Justice Lecture was recently established by the Oxford Law Faculty, as an annual lecture to be delivered each year by a leading figure in international law. The lecture series is generously supported by the Planethood Foundation