The ACIL Spring Lecture Series. Join us to examine how international law participates in making and unmaking hegemony.
acil.uva.nl/events/event...
Join us on Thursday 26 March in Amsterdam or online.
The one and only Sundhya Pahuja is coming to Amsterdam on 26 March!
Don't miss the opportunity to hear her weave the threads of the role of the corporation, colonial law-making and imperial expansion for an exploration of the possibilities of a jurisplural future.
acil.uva.nl/content/even...
Join us on 2 Feb➡️
@profveronika.bsky.social & @niccoloridi.bsky.social have carried out the first in-depth study of the lawyers appearing before the #ECHR. They aim to reveal the considerable influence these lawyers have in shaping the trajectory of human rights law.
acil.uva.nl/content/even...
How do you make crypto fraud understandable for everyone?
Dr Andrea Leiter @minorjurisprudent.bsky.social has been awarded an Amsterdam University Fund grant for her project 'Cryptologist: Making Blockchain Legible', researching the emerging field of crypto forensics. 👏
@uvalawschool.bsky.social
Het internationaal recht wordt verdrongen door pure machtspolitiek. Europa moet zich daarbij niet neerleggen, zegt hoogleraar @jannenijman.bsky.social in @volkskrant.nl. 'Als je het internationaal recht loslaat, kom je op een doodlopende weg.' @acil-uva.bsky.social @tmcasser.bsky.social
Amsterdam Center for International Law
Amsterdam Center for International Law
We are delighted to welcome Professor Sundhya Pahuja to the University of Amsterdam to give a public lecture on Thursday 26 March. Sundhya Pahuja is the Director of the Laureate Research Program in Gl...
We look forward to welcoming our guest speaker, Veronika Fikfak, to the University of Amsterdam on 2 February. Veronika is Professor of Human Rights and International Law at University College London ...
acil.uva.nl
The one and only Sundhya Pahuja is coming to Amsterdam on 26 March!
Don't miss the opportunity to hear her weave the threads of the role of the corporation, colonial law-making and imperial expansion for an exploration of the possibilities of a jurisplural future.
acil.uva.nl/content/even...
Amsterdam Center for International Law
Amsterdam Center for International Law
On 2 February, we welcome @profveronika.bsky.social & @niccoloridi.bsky.social. They've carried out the first in-depth study of the lawyers appearing before the #ECHR. 👉 bit.ly/4bAUkrG @acil-uva.bsky.social #HumanRightsLaw
Marjoleine Zieck, hoogleraar International Refugee Law, schrijft in haar column in Ars Aequi over het voormalige en het huidige vluchtelingenbeleid. Vanuit haar juridische expertise heldert zij ook enkele misverstanden op. bit.ly/4qv6TJ2 #VluchtelingenRecht #RefugeeLaw
Amsterdam Center for International Law
Het internationaal recht wordt in rap tempo verdrongen door pure machtspolitiek. Europa moet zich daarbij niet neerleggen, zegt hoogleraarJanne Nijman. ‘Als je het internationaal recht loslaat, kom je...
New episode of #CalledToTheBar: the right to protest under pressure.
@ntinatzouvala.bsky.social speaks with Maria O’Sullivan on ICCPR protections, restrictive laws, and the growing gap between formal rights and lived realities both internationally and in Australia.
soundcloud.com/calledtotheb...
Amsterdam Law School
We are delighted to welcome Professor Sundhya Pahuja to the University of Amsterdam to give a public lecture on Thursday 26 March. Sundhya Pahuja is the Director of the Laureate Research Program in Gl...
acil.uva.nl
Glad to see Adjudicating over Anarchy featured in
@jkatzcogan.bsky.social's International Law Reporter selection for this month! Also, I just received the first physical copies, so here's a peek!
Dit academisch jaar, waarin het Vluchtelingenverdrag van 1951 75 jaar wordt, wijdt Marjoleine Zieck, hoogleraar International Refugee Law aan de UvA en hoogleraar Public Inter…
In this episode of Called to the Bar: International Law Over Drinks, Ntina Tzouvala (UNSW) is joined by Dr Maria O’Sullivan (Deakin Law School) to unpack the legal frameworks governing the right to pr
Geraldo Vidigal (Univ. of Amsterdam) has published Adjudicating over Anarchy: Judicial Remedies, Compliance, and Enforcement in International Law (Cambridge Univ. Press 2026). Here's the abstract:
Geraldo Vidigal thoroughly examines the judicial powers of international courts and tribunals and how these powers are used in practice. Without access to state-backed enforcement measures, international adjudicators must rely on their authority to influence real-world outcomes. The book reviews, and offers a comprehensive theory for, the various social mechanisms that explain why and how international judicial pronouncements affect the behaviour of states, influencing the views of individuals within states as well as changing states' mutual expectations of cooperative and sanction-worthy behaviour. The book considers how judicial remedies can induce compliance by targeting specific areas of disagreement, interpreting obligations, declaring violations, and establishing how wrongdoer states must offset unlawful injury. An often untapped type of remedy relies on the ability of courts to determine permissible responses to breach: what measures other actors may take to respond to violations, compelling wrongdoers to comply with their obligations and provide redress for injury.