Universität Bonn

Institut für Völkerrecht

Rhineland Lectures in International Law

Rhineland Lectures in International Law

Am Institut für Völkerrecht finden in unregelmäßigen Abständen die Rhineland Lectures in International Law statt - Kurzvorträge in informellem Rahmen zu völkerrechtlichen Themen. Dieses Format bietet die Möglichkeit aktuelle Entwicklungen oder eigene Forschungsprojekte mit einem Kreis von Interessierten zu diskutieren.

Anschließend besteht die Möglichkeit bei Kaffee weiter ins Gespräch zu kommen.

Anstehende Veranstaltungen:

30. April, 13:00-14:00 Uhr - Prof. Dr. Miloš Vec (Universität Wien): "Vom Versailler Vertrag bis zur Großraumordnung - Nationalsozialistisches Völkerrechtsdenken im Kontext (1920-1950)"

  • Die Vorträge finden regelmäßig in der Bibliothek des Instituts für Völkerrecht statt. Abweichende Veranstaltungsorte werden vorab bekanntgegeben.
  • Um den Newsletter mit Ankündigungen kommender Veranstaltungen zu erhalten, schreiben Sie eine Email an Fine Prill.
  • Die Rhineland Lectures sind öffentlich. Eine Anmeldung ist nicht erforderlich.
  • Dr Jay Desai: "Sovereign Equality of States in International Law: Increasing Multipolarity in a Changing World Order"
  • Dr Teresa Quadt (Syria Justice and Accountability Centre): "Documenting Atrocities Committed in Syria before Domestic Courts - The Yarmouk Trials"
  • Prof Bharat H. Desai (Humboldt Awardee): "The UN@80: Looking Back to Look Ahead"
  • Prof Dr Stefan Talmon LL.M. M.A. (University of Bonn): "How to prove Genocide before the International Court of Justice"
  • Dr Franziska Knur (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt): "Weltraumbergbau? Das Völkerrecht und die Nutzung von Ressourcen auf Himmelskörpern"
  • Dr Jens Theilen (Helmut-Schmidt-Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg): "What’s the point of jus cogens?"
  • Dr Janina Barkholdt (Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne/Freie Universität Berlin): "The international legal order in a more multipolar world: What role for regional international law?"
  • Domen Tursic (Freshfields): "Addressing apparent asymmetry in international investment law"
  • Prof Dr Eliav Lieblich (Hans Kelsen Fellow, Cologne): "The Death and Life of the Prohibition on Forcible Reprisals"
  • Dr Alexis Galán (University of Bonn): "On the origins of modern international investment law: the 1967 OECD Draft Convention on Protection of Foreign Property"
  • Dr Alex P Dela Cruz (Tilburg University): "Archipelagos, imperial boundary-making, and the question of ‘whose history?’ in post-colonial Philippines"
  • Prof Dr Stefan Talmon LL.M. M.A. (University of Bonn): "Exploding Pagers and Walkie-Talkies: What does international law have to say about it?"
  • Prof Dr Björn Schiffbauer (University of Rostock): International Law in International Sports Organisations
  • Hartmut Rank: Indigenous Laws and Human Rights in Latin America
  • Dr Moritz Brake: Maritime Sicherheit und der Schutz kritischer maritimer Infrastruktur in gesamtstrategischer Perspektive
  • Prof Dr Stefan Talmon LL.M. M.A. (University of Bonn): The Gaza War: Self-Defence or Genocide?
  • Jens Dieckmann (Becher&Dieckmann): Fair Trial in International Criminal Law from a Counsel's Perspective
  • Dr Isabel Lischewski (University of Münster): Function - Interaction - Exclusion. How Rules of Procedure shape international treaty negotiations
  • Bethany Houghton (VU Amsterdam): Criminal Law and Climate Justice: Reconciling Stakeholders Perspectives of a Criminal Climate Law with Principles of Climate and Criminal Justice
  • Dr Elisabeth Hoffberger-Pippan (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt): Autonomous Weapon Systems, Artificial Intelligence and Humanitarian Law
  • Prof Dr Julian Scheu (University of Cologne): Climate Change, Human Rights, and the Redirection of Global Capital Flows
  • Dr Maria A. Gwynn (University of Bonn): International Law and Transboundary Hydropower Projects: Lessons learned from the Binational Entity ITAIPU
  • Natasha Holcroft-Emmess (University of Oxford): Notified Derogations and their Absence: from the Iraq War to the Covid-19 Pandemic
  • Dr Moritz von Rochow (Kiel University): Ukrainian Grain and Chinese Rare Earths: An Essential Facilities Doctrine in International Law
  • Yunus Gul (University of Bonn): Cyber operations and international law
  • Dr Moumita Mandal (Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law): Sexual and Gender-Based Violence in International Law: Making Institutions Work
  • Prof Dr Christian Tams (University of Glasgow): From Wimbledon (1923) to Rakhine (2022): Standing to enforce collective interests before the World Court
  • Vincent Schnell (Projektträger Jülich): Common Heritage of Humankind vs. Freedom of Research: How BBNJ addresses the controversial issue of Marine Genetic Resources
  • Dr Dana Schmalz (Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law): How the discourse on population growth shaped international law: a look at the first decades of the United Nations
  • Dr Thamil Venthan Ananthavinayagan (University of Nottingham): German Angst: facing colonial reverberations and legal repercussions
  • Dr Sué González Hauck (DeZIM): The politics of systematization as a scholarly task in international law
  • Dr Paula Rhein-Fischer (University of Cologne): Making Russia pay: Legal hurdles to use seized Russian assets to compensate Ukraine
  • Dr Sebastián Mantilla Blanco (University of Bonn): Denial of Justice in International Investment Law
  • Prof Dr Erika de Wet (Universities of Bonn & Graz): The Aggression against Ukraine and Austrian Neutrality
  • Ori Pomson (University of Cambridge): Twenty-Three Shades of Intervention: Ukraine vs. Russia at the International Court of Justice
  • Julian A. Hettihewa (University of Bonn): Looking Behind the UN Youth Office: Considering Structural Limitations of Youth Participation After the Party
  • Dr Alexis Galán (University of Bonn): Staring into the void: Territory at the International Court of Justice
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