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The Rise of Multistakeholder Partnerships

In the past two decades, multistakeholder partnerships have been on the rise. With the perceived failure of intergovernmental organisations to get things done, the international system has turned toward partnerships. Allowing for collaboration with private actors, they are increasingly seen as the governance model du jour. They’re praised for being democratically legitimate, thanks to their …

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Assessing Environmental Impact and the Duty to Cooperate: Environmental Aspects of the Philippines v China Award

The Philippines v China Award contained a number of novel and highly progressive findings with respect to obligations for the protection of the marine environment under UNCLOS. Thus far, these elements of the decision have gone largely unexamined in the surrounding literature. This article concentrates on two specific aspects of these findings: the obligations in …

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Teaching and Researching International Law in Asia 2018 Newsletter

Since 1964, Singapore has been taking the lead in gathering scholars from around the world to discuss their techniques and best practices in teaching international law. The Teaching and Researching International Law in Asia (TRILA) Conference 2018 is a continuation of that effort, and this newsletter summarises the Conference. 

Party-Appointed Arbitrators No More: The EU-Led Investment Tribunal System as an (Imperfect?) Response to Certain Legitimacy Concerns in Investor-State Arbitration

CETA, the EU-Vietnam FTA, and the EU-Singapore FTA are the first investment treaties to replace the practice of ad hoc tribunals and party-appointed arbitrators with a two-tiered investment tribunal system (ITS), consisting of a standing tribunal of first-instance and an appeal tribunal, comprised of a roster of members who are pre-selected by the treaty parties. …

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Australia and Timor-Leste’s Landmark Maritime Boundary Conciliation Process

On 9 May 2018, the Conciliation Commission in the maritime boundary dispute between Timor-Leste and Australia issued its report, marking the conclusion of the first-ever conciliation proceedings under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). This article aims to explain the significance of this ground-breaking conciliation case that culminates in the …

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