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Dive into the research topics where Beth Van Schaack is active.

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Featured researches published by Beth Van Schaack.


Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law | 2012

The Killing of Osama Bin Laden and Anwar Al-Aulaqi: Uncharted Legal Territory

Beth Van Schaack

In this paper, the author systematically examines the various legal arguments that were prompted by the killings of Osama Bin Laden and Anwar Al-Aulaqi. The author reviews the relevant international law—including jus ad bellum and jus in bello issues—as well as the relevant domestic law to ascertain the lawfulness of the killings.


International Criminal Law Review | 2011

The Crime of Aggression and Humanitarian Intervention on Behalf of Women

Beth Van Schaack

This article is part of a larger project to analyze the rarely-considered gender aspects of the crime of aggression and to explore whether or not the amendments adding the crime of aggression to the Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) represent an advancement for women. This piece focuses on the potential for the new provisions to chill bona fide exercises of humanitarian intervention given that (1) the crime is expansively drafted to potentially cover all uses of sovereign force, (2) delegates rejected efforts by the United States to include an express exception for military operations launched to prevent the commission of other crimes within the jurisdiction of the ICC, and (3) other proposals that would have prevented humanitarian interventions from being considered “acts of aggression” were not fully explored or implemented. The article acknowledges that feminist theory may never fully come to terms with a notion of humanitarian intervention given the doctrine’s valorization of militarism, especially in light of the fact that women are so often excluded from decisions about uses of force. It nonetheless argues that if we want to hold out the possibility of humanitarian intervention being deployed in defense of women, elements of the new provisions (such as the terms “manifest,” “character,” “gravity,” and “consequences”) should be interpreted to exclude situations involving the nascent responsibility to protect doctrine.


Yale Law Journal | 1997

The Crime of Political Genocide: Repairing the Genocide Convention's Blind Spot

Beth Van Schaack


Archive | 1999

The Definition of Crimes Against Humanity: Resolving the Incoherence

Beth Van Schaack


Harvard International Law Journal | 2001

In Defense of Civil Redress: The Domestic Enforcement of Human Rights Norms in the Context of the Proposed Hague Judgments Convention

Beth Van Schaack


Archive | 2007

Crimen Sine Lege: Judicial Lawmaking at the Intersection of Law and Morals

Beth Van Schaack


Archive | 2007

Darfur and the Rhetoric of Genocide

Beth Van Schaack


Vanderbilt Law Review | 2004

With All Deliberate Speed: Civil Human Rights Litigation as a Tool for Social Change

Beth Van Schaack


The American University journal of gender, social policy & the law | 2009

Obstacles on the Road to Gender Justice: The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda as Object Lesson

Beth Van Schaack


Columbia Journal of Transnational Law | 2011

Negotiating at the Interface of Power & Law: The Crime of Aggression

Beth Van Schaack

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