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I've fallen behind in my Rwanda blogging. Here are some of the recent highlights — or lowlights, depending on your perspective:The ICTR announced that it will miss its 2008 deadline for completing its trial phase. According to the Tribunal's spokesman, at least one trial will not be finished by the end of the year. The ICTR...

5 + 10 = X X – Y = 0 if Y = 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 5 + 10 = X X – Z = X/192 if Z = 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, or 15 What is X, Y, and Z where Y = Z? (Continue Reading for the Answer) Y = Permanent Members of the Security...

Here you go. The idea: everything you need to know about really big issues in two pages or less (charts included). Say you are the CEO of Sara Lee or something and find yourself among the great minds of Davos, your KnowledgeConcierge (space intentionally omitted) will bring you up to speed so that you can take it all in....

For my last post here at Opinio Juris, I propose to tap into what knowledge I have of my home jurisdiction, Germany, on an issue common to US and German law. (No apologies here for the use of comparative material in constitutional interpretation.) That issue is in the context of the domestic effect of international treaties, and more particularly in the...

For much of the last year, I've been thinking about whether existing international humanitarian law rules are up to the task of dealing with issues of cyberwar and cyberterror, or, to use the U.S. military terminology--information operations (IO). In addition to an Op-Ed and a short piece for a military audience, I've now posted on SSRN a more detailed...

Because Tobias is far too modest to do it himself, I want to formally announce -- and plug -- the launch of his new group blog, Invisible College. Invisible College rises phoenix-like from the ashes of two predecessors, the group blogs 1948 and The Core. Here is a snippet from the introductory post:By joining forces, we hope to...

From last week's D.C. Circuit decision in Rasul v. Myers, Judge Brown in a concurring opinion argued: The present case involves the method of detaining and interrogating alleged enemy combatants during a war--a matter with grave national security implications. Permitting damages suits by detainees may allow our enemies to “obstruct the foreign policy of our government.” Moreover, dealing with foreign relations...

The American Law Institute has recently approved the first ever Restatement on International Commercial Arbitration. This is one of the most important international projects that the ALI has undertaken in decades. The Reporter for the Restatement will be George Bermann (Columbia) and the Associate Reporters will be Jack Coe (Pepperdine), Catherine Rogers (LSU/Bocconi), and Chris Drahozal (Kansas). ...

You can insure against both. This piece from Sunday's NYT has the interesting details on liability insurance that covers more than 30,000 federal officials against the perils of work-related lawsuits. With a policy costing less than $300 a year (the government often picking up half the tab), mid-level officials can afford the likes of Clinton impeachment attorney Robert...

The media may have forgotten about the Iraqi High Tribunal now that Saddam is dead and buried, but that doesn't mean its problems have gone away. Case in point — the talented Chief Prosecutor at Saddam's trial, Jaffar al-Moussawi, has been demoted and transferred after criticizing the Tribunal's "financial and ethical corruption" and opposing the execution of Sultan Hashem,...

Martin Luther King did not intend to impact international law, but he did so nonetheless. His life-long struggle was to secure racial equality in the United States. His non-violent efforts rarely focused on the worldwide struggle against racial injustice. But on a few occasions he elaborated on the relationship between the civil rights movement and the global...