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Distinguished scholars and practitioners commemorate and expand upon the work of international judge, arbitrator, and professor, David D. Caron (1952-2018). By Peaceful Means is an insightful examination of how international dispute resolution seeks to avert disaster and mitigate discord, and how it might continue to do so in our uncertain future.

Produktbeschreibung
Distinguished scholars and practitioners commemorate and expand upon the work of international judge, arbitrator, and professor, David D. Caron (1952-2018). By Peaceful Means is an insightful examination of how international dispute resolution seeks to avert disaster and mitigate discord, and how it might continue to do so in our uncertain future.
Autorenporträt
Charles N. Brower is an Arbitrator Member of Twenty Essex Chambers, has sat as Judge ad hoc of the International Court of Justice in three active contentious proceedings (2014-2022), sits as Judge of the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal (1983-present), and has sat as Judge ad hoc of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (1999-2002). Judge Brower has received Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Center for American and International Law, the Section of International Law of the American Bar Association and Global Arbitration Review, as well as the Stefan A. Riesenfeld Memorial Award from Berkeley Law School, the Pat Murphy Award from the Institute for Transnational Arbitration, and the Manley O. Hudson Medal from the American Society of International Law. Joan E. Donoghue has been a Judge of the International Court of Justice since 2010 and has served as its President since February 2021. She joined the Court after a career at the U.S. State Department, where she was the senior career attorney from 2007-2010. Judge Donoghue has also been a member of investor-state arbitral tribunals and annulment committees and has taught courses in international law at several law schools and in the regional training program of the United Nations. Cian C. Murphy is a Barrister at Doughty Street Chambers. He is a member of the World Justice Project's Rule of Law Research Consortium, a Fulbright-Schumann Scholar, and author of prize-winning works on counter-terrorism and international law. Cymie R. Payne is an Associate Professor in the Department of Human Ecology and the School of Law at Rutgers University. She appeared as legal counsel before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in its deep seabed mining and fisheries advisory opinion cases, and as expert on environmental reparations in a case before the International Court of Justice. She was counsel for the United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC) reparations program for environmental damage due to armed conflict. She currently serves as Chair, Ocean Law Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature-World Commission on Environmental Law. Esmé R. Shirlow teaches and researches in the fields of public international law, international dispute settlement, and international investment law and arbitration. Esmé is the General Editor of the Australian Year Book of International Law and an Associate Editor with the ICSID Review and Kluwer Arbitration Blog. She is currently Vice President (Australia) of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law, and Co-Chair of the Society's International Economic Law Interest Group. Esmé is admitted as a solicitor in the Australian Capital Territory and maintains a practice in the field of international law advising parties to investor-State and State-State claims. Prior to joining the ANU, she worked in the Australian government's Office of International Law.