Páginas

segunda-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2017

Sovereignty and Migration in the Doctrine of the Law of Nations: An Intellectual History of Hospitality from Vitoria to Vattel

Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (HEI)

February 6, 2017

European Journal of International Law, 2016, Vol. 27 No. 4, 901–922 

Abstract:

This intellectual history of hospitality from Vitoria to Vattel provides an alternative story to the prevailing narrative of migration control. Although migration control is frequently heralded as falling within the domestic jurisdiction of states, the movement of persons across borders is a permanent feature of history that has been framed by international law for ages. The early doctrine of the law of nations reminds us that migration was at the heart of the first reflections about international law through the enduring dialectic between sovereignty and hospitality. This long-standing debate was framed by early scholars following three main trends, which constitute the focus of this article. The free movement of persons was first acknowledged by Vitoria and Grotius as a rule of international law through the right of communication between peoples. By contrast, Pufendorf and Wolff insisted on the state’s discretion to refuse admission of aliens as a consequence of its territorial sovereignty. Yet, in-between these two different poles – sovereignty versus hospitality – Vattel counterbalanced the sovereign power of the state by a right of entry based on necessity. As exemplified by the founding fathers of international law, the dialectic between sovereignty and hospitality offers innovative ways for rethinking migration.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 22

Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2912130>. Acesso em 17 fev. 2017.

quinta-feira, 16 de fevereiro de 2017

Responsibility

Forthcoming, ‘Fundamental Concepts for International Law’ (J d’Aspremont and S Singh, eds), Edward Elgar, 2017


Amsterdam Center for International Law No. 2017-03

16 Pages Posted: 9 Feb 2017 


University of Amsterdam - Amsterdam Center for International Law

Date Written: February 9, 2017

Abstract

The idea that international law requires that a breach is undone and reparation is provided is central to law as such – no less so to international law. Take away the notion of responsibility, and much of how we think about international law and why it matters starts to transform. This paper explores the structuring role of responsibility in international legal discourse, and discusses how transformations in the international legal system that move the dominant interstate system to the background inevitably affect the structuring role of international responsibility.

Reference
Nollkaemper, Andre, Responsibility (February 9, 2017). Forthcoming, ‘Fundamental Concepts for International Law’ (J d’Aspremont and S Singh, eds), Edward Elgar, 2017; Amsterdam Law School Research Paper No. 2017-04; Amsterdam Center for International Law No. 2017-03. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2914250

Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2914250>. Acesso em: 15 fev. 2017.

quarta-feira, 8 de fevereiro de 2017

Beyond Learning Objectives: A Taxonomy to Maximize Outcomes

Charlotte School of Law; Appalachian School of Law

January 14, 2017

Abstract:

If Paul Revere were part of the contemporary legal academy, he might ride out of Boston warning the legal academy, “Outcome Measurements are Coming!” The shift from past accreditation standards to current and future accreditation standards requires such warning and preparation. It is a fundamental shift that could cajole law schools to fundamentally revise their curricula, courses, teaching methods, and assessments. This article will provide a framework of learning objectives that will help law schools revise curricula and courses to meet the coming outcome measurement accreditation standards in the new legal education marketplace.

In the past, the ABA has accredited law schools based on inputs. Specifically, law schools needed to attract a certain caliber of student as measured by GPA and LSAT score. Currently, the ABA has moved toward accreditation standards based on outcome measurements rather than inputs. Law schools will no longer be able to provide curricula as the primary means for judging the quality of the educational program. Rather, schools are going to have to produce data that students met the learning objectives of the curricula. This shift is subtle, yet fundamental. It is no longer acceptable to simply teach the learning objectives. Students must also learn. And law schools must be able to prove that students learned. With the recent decline in law school applications, faculty are faced with a student body that is less and less prepared to begin a traditional legal curriculum. 

Thus, law schools must provide more training and prove more results with students who struggle more. And, this task must be done in an economically viable manner. This “new normal” might seem to present the academy with an insurmountable challenge. However, with curricula that are optimally structured to follow the natural progression of human learning, this otherwise overwhelming challenge becomes possible. 

This article provides a Taxonomy of Cognitive Legal Learning Objectives and Outcome Measurements. The taxonomy can help both the ABA and schools develop standardized language used to communicate learning and assessment objectives. The taxonomy provides a guide as to how to write curricular and course learning objectives. 

The taxonomy also guides law schools to structure curricula and courses to meet these learning objectives to create positive outcome measurements. Specifically, by creating curricula that mimics the natural progression of adult human learning, law students will be able to learn more efficiently and law professors of all experience levels can avoid misalignment between instruction, learning, and assessment. Additionally, by setting learning objectives that internalize the shift to measuring what students should be able to do (the measurable outcomes), the learning objectives could more closely align with measuring and proving student learning. 

In this article, I discuss what learning objectives, assessment objectives, and outcome measurements are and how to write them. Then I review existing taxonomies of learning objectives and discuss why the legal academy could benefit from a discipline-specific taxonomy of cognitive legal learning objectives. I then provide an introduction to Taxonomy of Cognitive Legal Learning Objectives and Outcome Measurements with descriptions of each of the general levels of legal learning objectives. Detailed descriptions of each dimension of the taxonomy will follow in subsequent papers, as will teaching and assessment tips that address specific and discreet learning objectives.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 49

Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2898648>. Acesso em 2 fev. 2017.


segunda-feira, 6 de fevereiro de 2017

Liberal Internationalism and the Populist Backlash

Eric A. Posner University of Chicago - Law School

January 11, 2017


Abstract:
A populist backlash around the world has targeted international law and legal institutions. Populists see international law as a device used by global elites to dominate policymaking and benefit themselves at the expense of the common people. This turn of events exposes the hollowness at the core of mainstream international law scholarship, for which the expansion of international law and the erosion of sovereignty have always been a forgone conclusion. But international law is dependent on public trust in technocratic rule-by-elites, which has been called into question by a series of international crises.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 18

Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2898357>. Acesso em 2 fev. 2017.

sexta-feira, 3 de fevereiro de 2017

SOBRE PLOMEROS Y ARQUITECTOS SOCIALES: ELEMENTOS Y PROBLEMAS DEL FALLO DE LA CORTE INTERNACIONAL DE JUSTICIA SOBRE LA INMUNIDAD JURISDICCIONAL DE LOS ESTADOS

POR CARLOS ESPÓSITO

Este análisis de la sentencia de la Corte Internacional de Justicia en el caso de las Inmunidades de Jurisdicción se lleva a cabo en dos partes. La primera presenta brevemente los elementos básicos del fallo de la Corte en el caso; la segunda identifica y discute algunos problemas que surgen de la decisión. Estos incluyen el carácter jurídico de la regla de la inmunidad de los Estados, los límites de la metodología positivista para establecer la práctica de los Estados como prueba de derecho internacional consuetudinario y sus excepciones, así como los problemas de una aproximación estrictamente procedimental para considerar una posible excepción a la inmunidad por serias violaciones al derecho internacional y al derecho internacional humanitario. El comentario concluye con una breve evaluación general de la sentencia, su influencia y el desarrollo futuro del derecho de las inmunidades de los Estados por los tribunales nacionales.

Carlos Espósito es abogado por la Universidad de Buenos Aires, Doctor en Derecho, cum laude, por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, donde se desempeña como catedrático de Derecho Internacional Público.

Disponível em: <http://www.revistaladi.com.ar/numero3-esposito/>. Acesso em 2 fev. 2017.