Author: Kenneth Anderson

OUP just sent along a review copy (note, per the FTC, free merchandise from OUP!!). The book is Rumu Sarkar, International Development Law: Rule of Law, Human Rights, & Global Finance. This isn't a review - I have only read the first chapter, and I am pretty certain I will find places both to agree and disagree.  But I am finding...

Charli Carpenter has an interesting short commentary over at RFE/RFL discussing the recently released fact-finding report on the Georgia-Russia war.  I have not had a chance to read the report, so I won't comment myself (I said something about my experiences as a human rights monitor of the early 1990s phase of the civil war, and then followed up with...

I've posted lots here about targeted killing, and written about it for publication, as well.  I'll be on NPR's All Things Considered today, in a story by correspondent Ari Shapiro, talking about targeted killings in relation to detention and interrogation.  (Now that I've seen the story, I see with pleasure that it also quotes Matthew Waxman, Vijay Padmanabhan, John Bellinger,...

Here's a follow-up to Julian's question about the World Bank - what's the future role of the IMF?  Interesting news story in the WSJ over the weekend on whether the IMF might become, as its chief would like, a quasi-central bank to the world - or instead, as the article suggests is the tenor of the G 20 meetings, a...

Actually, congratulations to the Obama administration for having the good sense to make this appointment.  My friend and Washington College of Law colleague Diane Orentlicher has joined the administration in DOS, and I don't think there's a better person in the country to fill this position: Professor Diane F. Orentlicher has been named Deputy, Office of War Crimes Issues for the...

... in my response to Eugene on the First Amendment and free speech and the HRC, over at Volokh.  I'm not cross-posting it here because it is somewhat specific to Eugene's post.  However, it is filled with many generalizations and unsupported assertions about what I think international law professors, taken as a community, think about free expression and the specifically...

Ben Wittes, who has guest-blogged with OJ in the past, has a blistering op-ed in yesterday's Washington Post, criticizing, well, just about everyone for the failure to take the policy issues of detention to Congress to craft a formal structure for addressing them.  The piece has made the rounds in the blogosphere, so I won't comment except to say that...

Ever since Ban Ki-Moon became UN Secretary-General, I have been hearing complaints about, well, nearly everything.  He's a colorless personality.  He's a diplomat and not 'global-presidential'.  He brings no passion to the job.  He wants (anyway wanted) senior officials to disclose their finances.  He's just a placeholder.  Etc.  Many of these criticisms could be reduced down to ...