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Category: European Law

ESIL Reflection – Ecological Violence Fast and Slow – International Law, Natural Resources in the OPT, and the ICJ Advisory Opinion – European Society of International Law

Posted on February 15, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on ESIL Reflection – Ecological Violence Fast and Slow – International Law, Natural Resources in the OPT, and the ICJ Advisory Opinion – European Society of International Law
ESIL Reflection – Ecological Violence Fast and Slow – International Law, Natural Resources in the OPT, and the ICJ Advisory Opinion – European Society of International Law

PDF VersionVol 14, Issue 1Editorial board: Patrycja Grzebyk (editor-in-chief), Lucas Lixinski, Alina Miron, Anne Saab and Peter-Tobias StollEliana Cusato (Assistant Professor, Amsterdam Law School)andSofia Tamburello (LLM Graduate, Amsterdam Law School) Credits (obliged to state): Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation).   ‘But we tell the occupation and whoever supports it, that we are…

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European Law

Time and Temporality before the ICJ in the Advisory Opinion on Obligations of States in respect of Climate Change – EJIL: Talk!

Posted on February 14, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Time and Temporality before the ICJ in the Advisory Opinion on Obligations of States in respect of Climate Change – EJIL: Talk!
Time and Temporality before the ICJ in the Advisory Opinion on Obligations of States in respect of Climate Change – EJIL: Talk!

The ICJ’s Advisory Opinion on Obligations of States in respect of Climate Change is one of a string of recent cases which has brought the ICJ to the centre of public discussions of international law (see coverage of proceedings on the BBC, the Guardian, and Forbes), and academic commentators have already noted the significance of the case for procedural rules on the participation of small island developing states and amicus curiae from NGOs, the establishing of obligations erga omnes, and the Court’s use of experts fantômes. In this short post, I want to focus on a different aspect of the Advisory Opinion: namely, its temporal significance, as a decision over when climate change began, how it manifests in our present, and how it will develop in the future.

Time may seem a marginal issue for understanding climate change. Yet across the submissions of the 96 states and 11 international organisations participating in the case, different histories, presents, and future expectations are again and again put before the ICJ to guide its decision. For some states, climate change has a long history, its origins stretching back decades to the emergence of scientific consensus on climate change in the 1960s, or even further back to colonial possession of natural resources and the Industrial Revolution (see, for example, Kenya’s submissions that carbon dioxide emissions should be measured from 1850). This creates a differentiated present: while some states have historically made the largest contributions to climate change, it is others that have been forced to bare its brunt. Accordingly, the history of climate change alters expectations about its future regulation. With the pollution of some states already threatening the existence of others, the ICJ must recognise legal obligations between these states which can halt and rectify the existing damage caused by climate change and restore the right of those states to self-determination over their future (see, among many passing citations by other states, the detailed submissions on self-determination by the Melanesian Spearhead Group, the Republic of Fiji, the Marshall Islands, Papua New Guinea, Kiribati, Liechtenstein, Micronesia, Namibia, Nauru, Palau, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, and Tuvalu).

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European Law

Three Crucial Aspects of Cannavacciuolo and Others v. Italy

Posted on February 14, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Three Crucial Aspects of Cannavacciuolo and Others v. Italy
Three Crucial Aspects of Cannavacciuolo and Others v. Italy

  On 30 January 2025, the Court delivered a long-awaited judgment in the case of Cannavacciuolo and Others v. Italy (earlier known as Di Caprio and Others v. Italy).   This case concerns decade-long, large-scale pollution caused by illegal dumping, burying and uncontrolled abandonment of waste, often conducted by criminal organised groups, in parts of…

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European Law

The EU Commission launches an anti-subsidy investigation on Chinese e-vehicles

Posted on February 13, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on The EU Commission launches an anti-subsidy investigation on Chinese e-vehicles
The EU Commission launches an anti-subsidy investigation on Chinese e-vehicles

“The Commission is launching an anti-subsidy investigation into electric vehicles coming from China” announced the President of the European Commission (the “Commission”), Ursula von der Leyen at her annual State of the European Union speech on 13 September 2023. What is an anti-subsidy investigation? The Commission’s DG Trade is launching an investigation into potential subsidies…

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European Law

Reversing Emancipation?

Posted on February 13, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Reversing Emancipation?
Reversing Emancipation?

Bolivia is currently experiencing a severe economic crisis, driven by the decline in natural gas production and exports—a key source of national revenue—along with a shortage of U.S. dollars, high inflation, and fuel shortages. These shortages have particularly highlighted the role of fuel smuggling in sustaining the informal economy, especially artisanal mining, which in some…

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European Law

The EU-Mercosur Free Trade Agreement – A “race to the bottom” when it comes to EU’s climate goals? – Official Blog of UNIO

Posted on February 12, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on The EU-Mercosur Free Trade Agreement – A “race to the bottom” when it comes to EU’s climate goals? – Official Blog of UNIO
The EU-Mercosur Free Trade Agreement – A “race to the bottom” when it comes to EU’s climate goals? – Official Blog of UNIO

Ana Cardoso (PhD candidate & Master’s in European Union Law at the School of Law of University of Minho) I. The European Union (EU) is one of the most active actors in the field of environmental protection worldwide.[1] However, today some of the EU’s most important partners – namely the United States of America (USA)…

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European Law

Meta’s Moderation Shift and the TikTok Ban: what’s cooking in the US and what this means for EU platform regulation

Posted on February 12, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Meta’s Moderation Shift and the TikTok Ban: what’s cooking in the US and what this means for EU platform regulation
Meta’s Moderation Shift and the TikTok Ban: what’s cooking in the US and what this means for EU platform regulation

The beginning of 2025 was marked by two important developments in the digital platform landscape. First, Meta announced that it would change the content moderation policies of Facebook and Instagram in the US, significantly reducing the amount of fact-checking. However, this decision will not come without regulatory challenges on the other side of the Atlantic;…

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European Law

European Copyright Society Opinion on Copyright and Generative AI

Posted on February 10, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on European Copyright Society Opinion on Copyright and Generative AI
European Copyright Society Opinion on Copyright and Generative AI

The European Copyright Society (ECS) has published its Opinion on copyright and generative AI.  The Executive Summary is reproduced below and the full Opinion is available here and here.   Executive Summary The ECS considers that the current development of generative artificial intelligence (AI), under the regulatory framework set up by the Directive on Copyright…

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European Law

2024 in Review: Renewed Momentum and Key Developments for the Energy Charter Treaty

Posted on February 10, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on 2024 in Review: Renewed Momentum and Key Developments for the Energy Charter Treaty
2024 in Review: Renewed Momentum and Key Developments for the Energy Charter Treaty

2024 witnessed significant developments concerning the Energy Charter Treaty (“ECT”), ranging from a new wave of withdrawals to the adoption of the modernised ECT in December. This post reviews the key ECT-related developments of 2024 and highlights relevant contributions published on the Kluwer Arbitration Blog (“KAB”).   New Wave of Withdrawals from the ECT In…

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European Law

UK Publishes AI Cyber Security Code of Practice and Implementation Guide

Posted on February 9, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on UK Publishes AI Cyber Security Code of Practice and Implementation Guide
UK Publishes AI Cyber Security Code of Practice and Implementation Guide

On January 31, 2025, the UK government published the Code of Practice for the Cyber Security of AI (the “Code”) and the Implementation Guide for the Code (the “Guide”).  The purpose of the Code is to provide cyber security requirements for the lifecycle of AI.  Compliance with the Code is voluntary.  The purpose of the…

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European Law

Posts pagination

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  • Polish law restricting the right to asylum at borders – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy
  • Canada’s DST Debacle a Case Study of Digital Strategy Trouble
  • Can A Buyer Back Out of a Non-Contingent Offer?
  • Province of Ontario Grants Province’s Publicly Assisted Post-Secondary Institutions Unfettered Discretion to Address Sexual Misconduct; Bans NDAs
  • Iran, Israel and Gaza Lecture; Edmund Siemers Lecture; Combatant Subjectivity and the Law of War Talk; EoI Statelessness and Citizenship Review; CfP SCR; Genocide in Gaza Lecture; CfP JGLR – EJIL: Talk!

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