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Article
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Saving the Serengeti: Africa’s New International Judicial Environmentalism
James Thuo Gathii
Wing-Tat Lee Chair of International Law, Loyola University Chicago School of Law.

I would like to thank Emily Hayes and Katie Cierzan for their invaluable research assistance. This paper is based on ideas developed in my Lecture at my induction as the Wing-Tat Lee Chair of International at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, on 3rd of March 2013.

I. Introduction

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Article
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The United Nations as Good Samaritan: Immunity and Responsibility
Kristen E. Boon

I benefited greatly from feedback on this paper at the University of Edmonton, Faculty of Law, the St. John’s International Law Workshop, and the William and Mary International Law Workshop. I would like to acknowledge very helpful comments by Chris Borgen, Danny Bradlow, Joanna Harrington, Peggy McGuiness, André Nollkaemper, Alice Ristroph, Annika Rudman, Brian Sheppard, Pierre Hughes Verdier, James Stewart, and the Seton Hall Law School faculty. Thanks to Amy Cuzzolino, Marissa Mastroianni, and Frank Ricigliani for their research assistance, and to Maja Basioli from the Seton Hall Law Library for her help.

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Article
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Contracting for Stability: The Potential Use of Private Military Contractors as a United Nations Rapid-Reaction Force
Jared Genser and Clare Garvie
Jared Genser (J.D. University of Michigan 2001; M.P.P. Harvard University 1998; B.S. Cornell University 1995;) is an Associate of The Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government and Adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. He is co-editor of THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL IN THE AGE OF HUMAN RIGHTS (Cambridge University Press, 2014). Clare Garvie (J.D. Georgetown University Law Center 2015; B.A. Barnard College, Columbia Univer

They would like to thank Sara Birkenthal and Elise Baranouski for their research and editing assistance.

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Comment
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Designing Women: The Definition of “Woman” in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
Elise Meyer
J.D. Candidate, 2016, The University of Chicago Law School.

The author of this student Comment is a ciswoman and welcomes critiques and comments she may not have investigated. She would also like to thank the CJIL staff, Professor Abebe, and Professor Citro for their perceptive feedback and suggestions.

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An Efficient Anticorruption Sanctions Regime? The Case of the World Bank
Tina Søreide, Linda Gröning, and Rasmus Wandall
Tina Søreide is an associate professor of law and economics at the Norwegian School of Economics. Linda Gröning is a law professor and Rasmus H. Wandall is Affiliated Senior Research Fellow, both at the University of Bergen, Norway.

Thanks to Jørn Jacobsen, Michael Kramer, Susan Rose-Ackerman and Catherine Sunshine for their discussion and comments. This paper is a result of research funded by the Norwegian Research Council and the Bergen Research Foundation.

I. Introduction

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Hybrid Tribunals and the Composition of the Court: In Search of Sociological Legitimacy
Harry Hobbs
Senior Research Officer, Senate Standing Committee on Economics, Parliament of Australia; Sessional Tutor in Public International Law, Australian National University.

Thanks to Joanna Langille, Ryan Liss, André Nollkaemper, Philip Alston, Alison Cole, William Burke-White, Sarah Lulo and participants in the Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows Program at the U.S. Institute of Peace, Washington D.C., 20–21 February 2015. Considerable thanks should also go to the staff of the Journal for their helpful comments and editorial assistance.