International Law Submission Deadlines: October 2008
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Upcoming submission deadlines in October 2008 for journals, conferences, symposiums, and student moot competitions.
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Deadline: 1 October 2008
Third World Approaches to International Law & the Persistence of the Question of Palestine
The Theme of Volume XV of the Palestine Yearbook of
International Law is “Third World Approaches to
International Law and the Persistence of the Question of
Palestine.” learn more… -
Deadline: 3 October 2008
3rd Global Conference on Evil, Law and the State
13-15 March 2009, Salzburg, Austria
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference will explore issues surrounding evil and law, with a focus on state power and violence. learn more… -
Deadline: 3 October 2008
Human Rights Watch Fellowships 2009-2010
Paid one-year positions in human rights. learn more… -
Deadline: 3 October 2008
Conference Call for Abstracts: Second Annual Graduate Student Conference of International, Transnational, and Comparative Law
9-11 January 2009, Toronto, Canada
Inviting papers relating to seven themes: progressive constitutionalism, critical legal studies, imperialism, globalization, fragmentation-pluralism, legal formalism, and transitional justice.
learn more… -
Deadline: 9 October 2008
Conference Call for Papers: 5th Annual International Conference on Technology, Knowledge and Society
30 January – 1 February 2009, Huntsville, Alabama, United Stats
Participants are also welcome to submit a presentation proposal either for a 30-minute paper, 60-minute workshop, a jointly presented 90-minute colloquium session. learn more… -
Deadline: 15 October 2008
Conference Call for Abstracts: 2009 IBRU conference: The State of Sovereignty
1-4 April 2009, Durham, United Kingdom
Inviting papers on sovereignty, territoriality, and international law. learn more… -
Deadline: 15 October 2008
Conference Call for Proposals: “The Iranian Revolution: Thirty Years”
7-8 February 2009, New Brunswick, New Jersey
Inviting papers on the impact of the revolution on Iran’s international relations, domestic law, women and minority rights, and access to justice. learn more… -
Deadline: 15 October 2008
American Qualifying Round: 4th Annual International Criminal Court Moot Competition
30 January – 1 February 2009, White Plains, New York
The North American round is open to all law students from the US, Canada, and Mexico. All other international students will compete in the qualifying rounds at The Hague, unless requested otherwise. Each team must submit a registration form and fee. The PACE website says the deadline is October 1 but co-sponsor ASIL reports the deadline is October 15. learn more… -
Deadline: 31 October 2008
Call for Abstracts: Journal of Private International Law Conference
17-18 April 2009, New York University, New York, United States
A limited number of paper-presenters will be selected on the basis of abstracts of 500 words on one or three topics: (1) international commercial law, (2) US and European conflicts methodologies: Is it time for a U.S. Restatement?, and (3) transnational litigation and arbitration. learn more… -
Deadline: 31 October 2008
Registration: 2008-2009 Niagara International Moot Court Competition
26-28 February 2009, Toronto, Ontario, Canada,
The Canada-United States Law Institute administers the Niagara International Moot Court Competition, an international law moot that draws fifteen to thirty teams from law schools in Canada and the United States. Participating teams address a hypothetical dispute affecting the bi-lateral relationship before the International Court of Justice. learn more… -
Soft Deadline: 31 October 2008
Fellowship in National Security and the Open Society
The Open Society Institute (OSI) has created new fellowships to focus on national security. Possible projects include comparative studies of national policies and practices, examining Islam in Western national security discourse and its implications for minority rights, and privatization of military functions. OSI has long worked to broaden public access to information, advance the rule of law, protect minority and human rights, create vibrant civil societies, and promote effective and accountable governance. learn more…