Articles for category: Focus

The principle of uti possidetis juris and the borders of Israel

The principle uti possidetis juris, raised in the Dissenting Opinion of Vice-President Sebutinde and according to which a new State established in formerly colonial territory inherits the former (colonial) borders is untenable in the situation of Israel. The reason is that at the time of independence Israel’s leaders accepted the principle of partition. No claim was made then or subsequently that the State of Israel inherited the borders of Mandatory Palestine and legislative acts reveal that Israel even regarded territories not within the UN Partition Plan borders as occupied territory.

The 2024 ICJ Advisory Opinion on the Occupied Palestinian Territory – An Introduction

The Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the "Legal Consequences arising from the Policies and Practices of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem" was a groundbreaking moment in international law. It has consequences not only for Israel, but also for third States, as well as international and regional organizations, in terms of non-recognition and non-cooperation. In this blog symposium, Palestinian, Israeli, and other scholars take stock of the Advisory Opinion and its regional and global impact.

Fanfictioning Critical Theory

To redeem its commitment to an ‘emancipatory critique’, LPE would do good by supporting itself with a theory of science, or at least an epistemic program. While the critical tradition has raised powerful normative desires, it first and foremost stands for an alternative model of scientific reasoning. LPE, as will be shown, updates much of critical theory’s historical normative claims. Yet, at least from my readings, it appears to be missing out on a theory of science.

Different Jurisdiction, Same Problems?

The relationship of Economics and Law is long, contested, and entangled. Law and Political Economy, a group of legal scholars that are mostly working at universities in the United States, offers yet another perspective on this relationship. LPE may be described as an attempt to analyse, criticise and shape Law and legal scholarship to contribute to a more democratic and more egalitarian society. How this concept translates to the german and european legal debate is examined in this blog post. What can LPE bring to the table?

Ausbildungsreform als präventiver Demokratieschutz

Für einen leistungsfähigen Rechtsstaat braucht es sowohl eine wehrhafte Demokratie als auch hochqualifizierten Nachwuchs. Generell zeigt sich aber, dass bislang überraschend wenige das Ziel, den Rechtsstaat gegenüber autoritär-populistischen Tendenzen resilienter zu machen, mit der juristischen Ausbildung zusammenbringen. Dabei ist empirisch belegt, dass Bildung, die auf Risiken und Gefahren vorbereitet, einen nicht zu unterschätzenden Einfluss auf die Herausbildung eines kritischen Bewusstseins und auf die Bewältigung von Krisen hat.