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July 18, 2011

How About an American Mandela Day?

The L.A. Times recognizes Nelson Mandela's 93rd birthday and describes how that day has come to be celebrated in South Africa.

A highway and a mile-wide valley divide the glittering retail towers and leafy suburbs of Sandton from the exuberant chaos and squalid poverty of Alexandra township in South Africa. But on Mandela Day, the birthday of the nation's best-loved liberation hero, the gulf seems less impossible.

... It's a day when people in South Africa try a little kindness — 67 minutes' worth — in honor of the 67 years that Mandela worked for equality in the African nation from 1942 until his retirement from public life in 2009.

Posted by Anupam Chander on July 18, 2011 at 12:48 PM in Globalization | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

July 14, 2011

Call for Papers: Asian International Law--Young Scholars Workshop

CALL FOR PAPERS

3rd NUS-AsianSIL Young Scholars Workshop 2012

Asian Approaches to International Law

NUS Law School, Bukit Timah Campus  ö Thursday, 23 February to Friday, 24 February 2012

 

The National University of Singapore (NUS) and the Asian Society of International Law (AsianSIL) are pleased to invite applications to attend the 3rd NUS-AsianSIL Young Scholars Workshop 2012 – Asian Approaches to International Law. The Workshop will be held at NUS in Singapore from Thursday, 23 February to Friday, 24 February 2012.

 

The workshop builds on the success of the first and second NUS-AsianSIL Young Scholars Workshops in 2008 and 2010 and is intended to cultivate the next generation of international legal scholars. Younger academics, doctoral students, young legal professionals with an interest in scholarship are encouraged to apply. Exceptional Master’s students are also welcome to submit their abstracts. Paper-givers who are selected through a competitive process will have their reasonable expenses covered.

 

Theme for the 2012 Workshop

 

Asia has long been an outlier both in terms of its international institutions and its embrace of international law. Asia has not chosen to construct regional institutions comparable to those in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, preferring to adopt an approach of variable geometry and pragmatic alliances. The region’s commitment to what some call the “Asian way” has sometimes privileged consultation and consensus over clear and binding obligations. The 3rd NUS-AsianSIL Young Scholars Workshop 2012 seeks to explore, from the perspective of younger scholars from Asia, how international law in the region has developed and what its prospects are in the decades to come.

 

The Workshop is intended to provide a platform for younger academics from the region to discuss ongoing research in international law with one another and more senior commentators. It also fosters the presence of “Asian voices” in international law through the post-Workshop publication of cutting edge research in the Asian Journal of International Law. (Please note that while all paper submissions shall be considered for publication, the Asian Journal of International Law’s offer to publish is subject to peer-review and editorial discretion.)

 

Proposals from young scholars and professionals across the region are encouraged on any topic linked to international law, but particularly focusing on Asian Approaches to International Law. Subject areas might include (a) History and Theory of International Law, (b) Law of Armed Conflict (IHL), (c) International Organizations, (d) Dispute Settlement, (e) Law of the Sea, (f) Law of Environment, (g) Human Rights, (h) International Criminal Law, (i) Law of Development, (j) International Economic Law, (k) Private International Law (Conflict of Laws).

 

To submit a proposal, please complete the Online Abstract Submission Form by Friday, 16 September 2011.

 

Details on the workshop can be found at http://asiansil.org/conference/YSW2012/ 

 

Those selected to participate in the workshop will be notified by Friday, 7 October 2011. Participation will be contingent on producing a draft of the paper (in the order of 8,000 words) by Friday, 30 December 2011.

Important Deadlines

Submission of Abstract

Friday, 16 September 2011

Notification of Acceptance        

Friday, 7 October 2011

Paper Submission

Friday, 30 December 2011

Registration Form Submission

Friday, 30 December 2011

Conference

Thursday, 23 February to

Friday, 24 February 2012

 

Best wishes,

 

Simon Chesterman

Vice Dean (Graduate Studies) and Professor, NUS Faculty of Law

Global Professor and Director, NYU School of Law Singapore Programme

 

 

Tan Hsien-Li

Research Fellow, Centre for International Law, NUS

 


Posted by Anupam Chander on July 14, 2011 at 07:19 AM in Globalization | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack