Search
Generic filters

Geneva Graduate Institute

Posts by authors affiliated with Geneva Graduate Institute

09 September 2024

Die Reproduktion sozialer Hierarchien im deutschen Jurastudium

Soziale Hierarchien werden in der juristischen Ausbildung in Deutschland widergespiegelt und reproduziert. Während in der Rechtssoziologie die soziale Reproduktion der juristischen Zunft schon lange Forschungsgegenstand ist, beschäftigen sich juristische Fakultäten selbst nur selten mit der Frage, wie die juristische Ausbildung zur Aufrechterhaltung und Reproduktion sozialer Hierarchien beiträgt. Noch seltener findet eine Reflektion darüber statt, wie diese Reproduktion sich auf die Rechtspraxis und ihren Beitrag zur gesellschaftlichen Ordnung in Zeiten einer stetig weiter auseinanderklaffenden Wohlstandsschere auswirkt.

Continue reading >>
05 July 2024

The Limits of Contemporary French Constitutionalism

French President Emmanuel Macron’s dissolution of France’s National Assembly (its lower house of parliament) on June 9th took many by surprise.  The results of the snap election’s first round suggest that Macron’s risky gamble—an attempt at turning the tide after his party suffered a major blow in the European Parliament elections—backfired majestically. However, more than a political setback for Macron, and outside of the many (highly warranted) concerns as to what harmful policies a new far-right-dominated parliament could pass, the move also raises many interesting constitutional law questions. Whatever the outcome of the second round on Sunday, July 7, France will face unprecedented circumstances that are likely to put the country’s 1958 constitution to the test.

Continue reading >>
0
29 March 2024

The Future of Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing under International Law

The sharing of pathogen samples and their associated genetic sequence data (GSD) is crucial for global pandemic prevention, preparedness and response. It enables global surveillance, risk assessment and the research and development of pandemic-related products. The sharing of related benefits is also seen as key to ensuring more equitable global access to the fruits of science. These issues, collectively known as Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS), remain a major point of contention in the ongoing Pandemic Agreement negotiations. In this post, I explore potential scenarios regarding the establishment or absence of the new PABS System, and their implications under international law.

Continue reading >>
20 March 2024
,

The Spanish Amnesty, the Conflict with Catalonia, and the Rule of Law

The Spanish amnesty for the Catalan independence movement is a victory for the rule of law, rather than a defeat. It is not an exemption from punishment otherwise due, but instead a reflection of the fact that the acts now amnestied should never have been subject to criminal prosecution in the first place. It is thus also a way for Spain to return to compliance with its obligations under European and international human rights law.

Continue reading >>
20 December 2023
, ,

A Duty to Rescue

Reports of migrants drowning in the Mediterranean have, unfortunately, become more and more frequent in recent years. A recently published MSF report has highlighted the role ‘pushbacks and systematic non-assistance to those at risk of drowning proliferate’ play in this regard. The report refers specifically to two events that happened in 2023 in which national authorities failed to launch rescue operations despite receiving the information on migrants in distress at sea hours before the tragedy. In this blogpost, we assess whether a coast guard’s failure to act in situations of migrants in distress might violate an incumbent criminal law duty to rescue. We map the core elements of the duty to rescue under criminal law and how they might apply to such a chain of events, using the abovementioned event of 14 June as an example.

Continue reading >>
0
Go to Top