20.1
Summer
2019

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Comment
20.1
Enforcement Through the Network: The Network Enforcement Act and Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights
Imara McMillan
J.D. Candidate, 2021, The University of Chicago Law School.

I would like to thank Professor Lakier and the entire Chicago Journal of International Law staff for helping me develop this Comment from a casual question of “is this legal” to a thesis about the way social media companies should be regulated across borders. A particular shout-out goes to the team at Cloudflare, who introduced me to the idea that international law touches more than just trade and migration. This is a piece I am really proud of, and I hope everyone who helped me work on it understands exactly how important their role was.

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20.1
The Persecution of Stones: War Crimes, Law’s Autonomy and the Co-optation of Cultural Heritage
Timothy William Waters
Professor of Law and Val Nolan Faculty Fellow; Associate Director, Center for Constitutional Democracy, Indiana University Maurer School of Law.

Thanks to Andrew Cohen, Luis Fuentes-Rohwer, Margaret Graves, Rachel Guglielmo, Jayanth Krishnan, Ethan Michelson, Christiana Ochoa, Austen Parrish, Marco Prelec, to audiences at the Association for the Study of Nationalities 23rd Annual Conference at Columbia University, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Eötvös Loránd University, and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam’s Center for International Criminal Justice for comments on earlier drafts, and to Dr. Manfredo Romeo for his assistance with the images.

 

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20.1
From the State of Emergency to the Rule of Law: The Evolution of Repressive Legality in the Nineteenth Century British Empire
Christopher Roberts
Max Weber Fellow, European University Institute.

Thanks to the members of the European University Institute’s Legal and Political Theory and History of Ideas and Imperial History Working Groups. Thanks also to the editors of the Chicago Journal of International Law for their insightful comments and diligent support.

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20.1
Closing the Liability Loophole: The Liability Convention and the Future of Conflict in Space
Trevor Kehrer
J.D. Candidate, 2020, The University of Chicago Law School.

I would like to express my sincerest gratitude to Professor Eric Posner for his guidance and to Marcus Bauer, Whittney Barth, and the rest of the CJIL team for their patience and encouragement. I would also like to thank Professor Alison Dundes Renteln for her mentorship and for inspiring my interest in international law, my friends for their camaraderie, and my family for its boundless love and support.