Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law

<span class="site-follow" id="journal-home"><!-- FILE: /main/production/doc/data/assets/site/nw_follow_ctx.inc --> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://network.bepress.com/api/follow/subscribe?publication=YjBiODA1ZjVhZjM3YjBmYg%3D%3D&amp;format=html" data-follow-set="publication:YjBiODA1ZjVhZjM3YjBmYg==" title="Follow Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law" class="btn followable">Follow</a> <!-- FILE: /main/production/doc/data/journals/scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/jil/assets/cover_text.inc (cont) --></span>

List of Papers (Total 1,424)

Talking Foreign Policy: "75th Anniversary of the Geneva Conventions

"Michael Scharf: Welcome to “Talking Foreign Policy,” the quarterly radio show and podcast produced by Case Western Reserve University and Ideastream Public Media.2 I’m your host Michael Scharf, Dean of Case Western Reserve University School of Law.3 Today we’re going to be talking about the need to update the seventy-five-year-old Geneva Conventions on the Law of War in light of...

Denile on the Nile: Balancing Ethiopia's Equitable and Reasonable Utilization of the Nile and Egypt's Desire to Maintain the Status Quo

For nearly one hundred years, Egypt has maintained complete control and utilization of the Nile River under the 1929 Nile Agreement signed by Egypt and the United Kingdom. This agreement was amended in 1959, making Sudan a party but alienating the remaining Nile Basin States. Ethiopia has now posed the greatest challenge to the validity of these Agreements by constructing the...

Uncovering Spain's Lost Victims: Can the Continuing Crimes Doctrine Expand the Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court?

Throughout Spain’s transition years (1975-1985), the country has maintained an “agreement to forget” and consequently failed to prosecute any perpetrators of crimes during the Franco dictatorship. This Note examines Franco-era forced disappearances in Spain and argues that the ICC has ratione temporis jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute perpetrators under the application of...

A Taking or Public Interest Intent: Launching a Universal Standard for Indirect Expropriation

Outstanding note of the year 2025 In 2023, the Russian government announced drastic measures to take control over the management of specific foreign investments located in Russia in response to sanctions imposed on Russian assets abroad. These measures affected nearly onefourth of the largest 200 companies in the world. Expropriation clauses in bilateral investment treaties...

From One Prison to Another: The Inordinate Criminalization of Women Who Kill Abusive Partners and a Proposed U.N. Response

Paradoxically, criminal justice systems around the world punish women who kill abusive partners with inordinate sentences despite explicitly recognizing the victimization that led them to homicide. This Note examines how universally entrenched gender stereotypes lead to such overcriminalization and amount to a violation of women’s rights to equality before the law. This Note then...

Sacrifice Zone: Conciliating Racial Discrimination in Louisiana's "Cancer Alley" Under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination

In June 2023, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) abandoned its civil rights investigation into racially discriminatory practices by Louisiana state agencies in Cancer Alley. It did so after issuing initial findings which indicated those agencies had operated in a racially discriminatory manner, subjecting predominately Black communities to adverse health outcomes resulting...

2024 Klatsky Endowed Lecture in Human Rights

By Andrew Cayley, Published on 01/01/25

Does the Dual-Use of Space Objects Necessitate a New Geneva Convention?

With “the first commercial space war” in Ukraine, the widespread and ever-increasing practice of using commercial space systems and services for military activities came to the public eye. States increasingly rely on and integrate commercial space activities1 into military activities to enhance their military capabilities and to strengthen deterrence. But by incorporating...

Autonomous Weapons Systems and Proportionality: The Need for Regulation

This Article examines the question of whether International Humanitarian Law (IHL) requires modification to effectively govern autonomous weapons systems (AWS). Given that the imminent development and deployment is unlikely to be prohibited, and that AWS may not comply with IHL in certain circumstances, the question of why and how IHL needs to be adjusted is important, and not...

New Treaty Law on Autonomous Weapons? An Opportunity to Reframe the Discourse

Calls for a new treaty for autonomous weapons—or for any other new technology—stem from a concern at the most basic level: the concern that LOAC’s existing treaties are not sufficient to fulfill their core purposes of protecting civilians and other vulnerable persons and regulating the conduct of hostilities. Could treaties drafted in 1949—when air power was new and space a...

The 1949 Geneva Conventions at 75: Examining the Place of Non-State Armed Groups

When the 1949 Geneva Conventions were adopted seventy-five years ago, the armed conflict landscape was very different from the one we currently observe. Back then, although non-State armed groups (NSAGs) existed, their regulation was considered to fall (almost exclusively) under the relevant territorial State’s internal laws. Nowadays, on the contrary, every time the...

Space Warfare: Do We Need Additional Treaties?

With the growth in counter-space weapons and military services dedicated to space, should International Humanitarian Law be expanded to address a “war in space?” This Paper will examine what a conflict in space would look like and existing laws that govern military activities in space. Ultimately, this paper will argue that International Humanitarian Law is already flexible...

"Old

As military capabilities and activities continue to expand into outer space, questions arise as to whether new legal frameworks are necessary to govern armed conflict beyond Earth. This Article argues that existing international humanitarian law (IHL) principles, including distinction, proportionality, necessity, and humanity, remain sufficient to regulate military operations in...

Autonomous Weapons Systems and the Need to Update International Humanitarian Law?

This Article discusses whether the relevant rules of International Humanitarian Law (IHL), and in particular, the 1949 Geneva Conventions and their 1977 Additional Protocols should be updated in order to develop a clearer framework regarding the permissibility and legality of the use of Autonomous Weapon Systems (AWS) in armed conflict. This Article first discusses the existing...

A Taste of Armageddon: Legal Considerations for Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems

Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS) represent a profound shift in the nature of warfare, where machines, not humans, make life-or-death decisions on the battlefield. While these weapons offer strategic advantages, such as reducing human casualties and increasing operational efficiency, they also introduce significant legal, ethical, and accountability challenges. This...

The Geneva Conventions at 75: An Argument that New Legal Authority Is Needed to Fill Critical Gaps

For seventy-five years, the Geneva Conventions have served as the gold standard of treatment for military forces that take part in hostilities. However, modern developments on the battlefield, including the rise of non-state actors in today’s conflicts, have exposed gaps in the Geneva Conventions that require new legal authority. States should pursue avenues to fill these gaps...

Human Rights in Technology -- A Need for a New Norm

The field of cyber security has relied on norms quite heavily to govern the behavior of states and non-state actors in cyberspace. However, existing norms do not offer guidance on integrating attention to human rights into the design and development of digital consumer products. This Paper introduces a way to foresee the human rights impact of new technology combined with a form...

Cyber Operations and the Crime of Aggression

The Article examines how the crime of aggression could be committed through cyber operations, analyzing the definition of the crime contained in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The Article also examines the restrictive jurisdictional regime that the ICC has over the crime of aggression, which States Parties must fix so that the ICC can have meaningful...

Digital Sovereignty and AI: New Threats to Corporate Participation in Internet Governance?

Authoritarian regimes have long challenged the multistakeholder model of Internet governance in pursuit of more state-centered controls. Recent assertions of digital sovereignty, coupled with dramatic advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), present twin threats that those regimes may now deploy to advance that challenge. This Article argues that corporations, which...

Foreword: The Geneva Conventions at 75: Need for Innovation

By Michael P. Scharf and Annalie Buscarino, Published on 01/01/25