Ralph Wilde CV March 2019 for web - UCL · Ralph Wilde 4 4.1.4 Leadership, management and...

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Ralph Wilde Associate Professor, UCL, University of London: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/people/dr-ralph-wilde Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School: http://hrp.law.harvard.edu/visiting-fellows/ralph-wilde/ https://twitter.com/ralphwilde Human Rights Beyond Borders research project, funded by the European Research Council: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/research/groups-and-projects/human-rights-beyond-borders I am a member of the Faculty of Laws at University College London, University of London. I write and teach on international law and politics, adopting cross-disciplinary methodologies. My previous work focused on the concept of trusteeship over people in international law and public policy, addressing colonialism, belligerent occupation and international territorial administration. My book on that topic, International Territorial Administration: How Trusteeship and the Civilizing Mission Never Went Away (Oxford University Press, 2008) was awarded the Certificate of Merit (book prize) of the American Society of International Law in 2009. My current project, ‘human rights beyond borders’, on the extraterritorial application of international human rights law, is at the writing -up phase, with three monographs to be published by Cambridge University Press. It is funded by the award of a Frontier Research Grant (in the ‘Consolidator’ category) by the European Research Council. I am member of the International Law Association (ILA) International Committee on Human Rights in Times of Emergency, and previously served on Executive Board of the European Society of International Law, the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law and, at the ILA, as Co-Rapporteur of the Human Rights Committee, one of the UK representatives on the international Executive Council, Rapporteur of the Study Group on UN Reform, and Joint Honorary Secretary of the British Branch. In 2010 the UK Leverhulme Trust awarded me a Philip Leverhulme Prize, which is given to UK- based academics under 40 who are judged to be ‘outstanding scholars who have made a substantial and recognized contribution to their particular field of study, recognized at an international level’. I am currently a member of the Equality and Diversity Advisory Panel for the UK government Research Excellence Framework (REF) university research assessment exercise. (1) QUALIFICATIONS Cambridge University Ph.D. (Doctorate in Law), 2003 Topic: ‘The administration of territory by international organizations: Conceptualizing the policy institution’ Thesis awarded the Cambridge University Yorke Prize (for a thesis of distinction) Awards made to support doctoral research: - Cambridge University Humanitarian Trust Studentship, 2000 (renewed 2001) - Academic Council on the UN System (ACUNS) Dissertation Award, 2000 - British Academy (Arts and Humanities Research Board) Scholarship, 1999 2002 LL.M., First Class (highest mark with Firsts in all papers; second highest mark overall), 1999 - Whewell Scholarship in International Law - Clive Parry Prize for International Law - College Prize - British Academy (Arts and Humanities Research Board) Scholarship to fund LLM studies - Winner, British Foreign and Commonwealth Office International Law Essay Prize, 1999 European University Institute, Florence Diploma in European Human Rights Law, cum laude, 1997 (the only time the Diploma has been awarded with distinction in its 27+ year history) Inns of Court School of Law, London Bar Vocational Course, 1997 Called to the Bar of England & Wales, Middle Temple, London, 1997 (non-practising) I am not a practising barrister and none of my work is performed on the basis of being a qualified legal professional in any jurisdiction, including the UK - Diplock Scholarship from Middle Temple

Transcript of Ralph Wilde CV March 2019 for web - UCL · Ralph Wilde 4 4.1.4 Leadership, management and...

Ralph Wilde Associate Professor, UCL, University of London: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/people/dr-ralph-wilde Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School: http://hrp.law.harvard.edu/visiting-fellows/ralph-wilde/ https://twitter.com/ralphwilde Human Rights Beyond Borders research project, funded by the European Research Council: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/research/groups-and-projects/human-rights-beyond-borders I am a member of the Faculty of Laws at University College London, University of London. I write and teach on international law and politics, adopting cross-disciplinary methodologies. My previous work focused on the concept of trusteeship over people in international law and public policy, addressing colonialism, belligerent occupation and international territorial administration. My book on that topic, International Territorial Administration: How Trusteeship and the Civilizing Mission Never Went Away (Oxford University Press, 2008) was awarded the Certificate of Merit (book prize) of the American Society of International Law in 2009. My current project, ‘human rights beyond borders’, on the extraterritorial application of international human rights law, is at the writing-up phase, with three monographs to be published by Cambridge University Press. It is funded by the award of a Frontier Research Grant (in the ‘Consolidator’ category) by the European Research Council. I am member of the International Law Association (ILA) International Committee on Human Rights in Times of Emergency, and previously served on Executive Board of the European Society of International Law, the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law and, at the ILA, as Co-Rapporteur of the Human Rights Committee, one of the UK representatives on the international Executive Council, Rapporteur of the Study Group on UN Reform, and Joint Honorary Secretary of the British Branch. In 2010 the UK Leverhulme Trust awarded me a Philip Leverhulme Prize, which is given to UK-based academics under 40 who are judged to be ‘outstanding scholars who have made a substantial and recognized contribution to their particular field of study, recognized at an international level’. I am currently a member of the Equality and Diversity Advisory Panel for the UK government Research Excellence Framework (REF) university research assessment exercise. (1) QUALIFICATIONS Cambridge University

Ph.D. (Doctorate in Law), 2003 Topic: ‘The administration of territory by international organizations: Conceptualizing the policy institution’ Thesis awarded the Cambridge University Yorke Prize (for a thesis of distinction) Awards made to support doctoral research:

- Cambridge University Humanitarian Trust Studentship, 2000 (renewed 2001) - Academic Council on the UN System (ACUNS) Dissertation Award, 2000 - British Academy (Arts and Humanities Research Board) Scholarship, 1999 – 2002

LL.M., First Class (highest mark with Firsts in all papers; second highest mark overall), 1999 - Whewell Scholarship in International Law - Clive Parry Prize for International Law - College Prize - British Academy (Arts and Humanities Research Board) Scholarship to fund LLM studies - Winner, British Foreign and Commonwealth Office International Law Essay Prize, 1999

European University Institute, Florence

Diploma in European Human Rights Law, cum laude, 1997 (the only time the Diploma has been awarded with distinction in its 27+ year history)

Inns of Court School of Law, London Bar Vocational Course, 1997

Called to the Bar of England & Wales, Middle Temple, London, 1997 (non-practising) I am not a practising barrister and none of my work is performed on the basis of being a qualified legal professional in any jurisdiction, including the UK - Diplock Scholarship from Middle Temple

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- Ian Karten Scholarship from the Ian Karten Trust - Paddington Scholarship from Westminster Council - Templeman Scholarship, Middle Temple (to visit India on behalf of the Inn)

City University, London

Diploma in Law (CPE), 1996 - City Foundation Scholarship

Converted to MA (Law) by dissertation, 2005 London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), University of London

B.Sc. (Econ), International Relations, 2:1, 1995 Short courses and workshops attended

x Academic Council on the UN System/American Society of International Law, Workshop on Global Governance, Warwick University, Summer 2000

x Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, UK, International Peacekeeping Course, 1997 x Hague Academy of International Law, Summer Course, 1996 (Cambridge International Law Trust Scholarship)

(2) PRIZES (OTHER THAN QUALIFICATION-RELATED PRIZES, LISTED ABOVE) Leverhulme Trust (UK), Philip Leverhulme Prize 2010 Around 25 Prizes are awarded annually to individual academics under 40 based at UK institutions who are judged to be ‘outstanding scholars who have made a substantial and recognized contribution to their particular field of study, recognized at an international level, and where the expectation is that their greatest achievement is yet to come.’ Each year the Trust stipulates around five disciplines, one of which the recipients should be working in. 2010 was the first year that law was named as one of the five. See http://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/news/awards/plp.cfm; http://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/news/newsletter.cfm (January 2011 issue); http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1011/101111602 See also ‘research funding’ below American Society of International Law Certificate of Merit (book prize) Awarded to the book International Territorial Administration: How Trusteeship and the Civilizing Mission Never Went Away (OUP) (see publications, below) in 2009. Three books are usually given this award annually. This is one of the few times the prize has been awarded to someone from the UK, and at an early stage in their career, in the 60+ year history of the prize. See <https://www.asil.org/sites/default/files/ASIL%20Book%20Awards.pdf> and (2010) 103 ASIL Proc. 519 (3) AREAS OF EXPERTISE General international law; the law and practice of colonialism, occupation, international territorial administration, the League of Nations Mandate System and the United Nations Trusteeship System, ‘state-building’ and ‘post-conflict reconstruction’; the concept of trusteeship over people in international law and public policy; the extraterritorial activities of states, and the application of international law, including human rights law and refugee law, to this activity; the law and policy relating to forced migration, including refugees and internally displaced people; the administration of camps housing refugees and internally displaced people by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); international organizations, including the United Nations, notably issues of legal responsibility (including that of member states), applicable law, immunities and reform; human rights law and international development assistance policy; the relationship between different areas of international law; international legal theory; state immunity and its interface with international criminal law and international human rights law; the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court; human rights law in wartime and occupation situations, and its relationship to the law of armed conflict, occupation law, and rights/obligations emanating from UN Security Council Resolutions; the law and practice of statehood and recognition of statehood, in general and in

Ralph Wilde 3 relation to the territories of the former Yugoslavia, notably Kosovo, in particular; international interventions (past/present/proposed) in the following places: the territories of the former Yugoslavia, especially Bosnia and Herzegovina, Eastern Slavonia (Croatia) and Kosovo; East Timor; Western Sahara; the Palestinian Territories; Jerusalem; West Irian/Irian Jaya; Leticia (Colombia) in the 1920s; Danzig and the Saar in the 1920s and 1930s; the Congo in the 1960s; South West Africa/Namibia before independence. (4) UNIVERSITY POSTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES For details of courses taught, see the final sub-section, 4.9, below 4.1 University College London (UCL), University of London, Faculty of Laws 4.1.1 Contact details and position Full-time tenured member, Faculty of Laws, since July 2002 Lecturer, 2002-5; Associate Professor/Reader, since 2005 https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/people/dr-ralph-wilde Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens, London WC1H 0EG, UK 4.1.2. Teaching—courses (for details of the courses, see sub-section 4.9 below) Course types

x LLB: First law degree (taught at undergraduate level) x LLM: Second (‘Master’s’) law degree (taught at graduate level)

4.1.2.1 Public International Law LLB course (2002-10, Co-Convenor, 2003–4, Convenor, forthcoming 2019) (part of

course)

4.1.2.2. War Law LLM course (2007-10, as Convenor) (full course)

4.1.2.3. International Human Rights Law LLM course (2002-10, Convenor, 2002–6, Convenor, forthcoming 2019) (part of course)

4.1.2.4. The Use of Force by States (forthcoming, 2019) (full course)

4.1.2.5. Decolonizing Law (forthcoming, 2019) (full course)

4.1.2.6. European Convention on Human Rights LLM course (2008-10) (part of course)

4.1.2.7. United Nations Law LLM course (2003 – 6, as Convenor) (part of course)

4.1.2.8. Colonialism and International Law LLM course at SOAS (2006-2009) (one session) 4.1.3 Teaching—doctoral student supervision (as principal supervisor)

x Matthew Nicholson, successfully completed. Went on to an appointment as a Lecturer at Southampton University and then Durham University. Articles based on parts of doctoral thesis were published in the International and Comparative Law Quarterly, winning the ICLQ Young Scholar Prize, and Law and Critique.

x Alejandro Carballo Lleyda (on behalf of Madrid University), successfully completed. Went on to be appointed General Counsel of the International Energy Charter Secretariat. Article based on part of doctoral thesis published in the European Journal of International Law.

Ralph Wilde 4 4.1.4 Leadership, management and administration 4.1.4.1 UCL Faculty Laws Vice Dean for Research, 2007-09

x Collectively responsible for the management of the Faculty, covering the full spectrum of academic activity, from appraisals to mentoring and recruitment, student assessments, research assessment exercises, issues of personnel management, teaching and student careers, finances, external relations and admissions.

x Individually responsible for leadership of all research-related activity in the Faculty, including the research assessment exercise, research funding and research (doctoral) studies. Led a major Faculty review on research governance on the basis of a detailed survey of national and international research policy and practice and a sustained Faculty-wide consultation process. This formed the basis for the successful adoption of a new Faculty research strategy, including changes to policies, governance and practices, as part of an overall Faculty strategy reform process.

4.1.4.2 Committee leadership and membership—Faculty-level

x Member, Dean’s Team (collective body managing the Faculty, through weekly and ad hoc meetings and email deliberations), 2007-9

x Convenor, UCL Laws Research Team (Research Committee) (responsible for academic research, research funding, and doctoral studies), 2007-09

x Member, UCL Laws Research Committee, 2004 – 6 x Member, Advisory Board, Centre for International Courts and Tribunals, UCL, since 2003 x Member, Steering Committee, Institute for Human Rights, UCL, 2010-11 x Member, UCL Laws LLM Committee, 2006 x Member, UCL Laws Governance Working Group, 2006

4.1.4.3 Committee membership—University-level

x Member, UCL Research Strategy Committee, 2007-09 x Member, UCL Research Governance Working Group, 2007-09 x Member, UCL Programme and Course Approvals Steering Group, 2005 – 6 x Member, UCL Careers Advisory Committee, 2003 – 6 x Member, UCL LGBTQ advisory group, 2010-3

4.1.4.4 Committee leadership and membership—University of London-level (on behalf of UCL)

x Member, Advisory Board, London University Institute for Advanced Legal Studies, 2009-10 x Chair, London University LLM international law exam scrutiny committee, 2003, 2005

4.1.4.5 Events organization

x Convenor, UCL Laws/ILA British Branch International Law Seminar Series, 2002-11, organizing weekly

public events for international lawyers drawing a wide range of distinguished expert speakers and particpants both nationally and internationally, from academia, public and private practice.

4.1.4.6 Other university leadership and administration x Admissions Tutor, UCL Laws undergraduate admissions team, 2009-10 x UCL Laws Careers Tutor, 2004-6

4.1.5 Personnel responsibilities: mentoring, supervision (not research student supervision) and recruitment

Ralph Wilde 5 4.1.5.1 Recruitment

x Member of numerous appointments panels for academic and professional/administrative posts at all levels

x Chair of a Faculty appointments panel, 2014 and 2017

4.1.5.2 Mentoring of early-career colleagues (covering full spectrum of academic activity, including doctoral supervision)

x Formal Faculty mentor to Douglas Guilfoyle x Informal Faculty mentor to Danae Azaria

4.1.5.3 Direct supervision of the work of the following research assistants/associates/fellows

x Dr Lorenzo Gasbarri x Dr Silvia Borelli x Dr Karen da Costa x Pelin Ekmen x Axelle Lemaire x Dr George Letsas x Dr Virginia Mantouvalou x Alon Margalit

4.2 Governance of other universities (including the University of London, which UCL is part of) University of London Member of the Senate (governing board), 1994 – 1995 London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), University of London Member of the Court of Governors (governing board), 1993 – 1994 4.3 External support provided to other universities 4.3.1 External examining

x Cambridge University: External examiner for master’s and doctoral dissertations x Oxford University: External examiner for master’s and doctoral dissertation x LSE: External examiner for doctoral dissertation x Essex University: External examiner for doctoral dissertation x Tel Aviv University: External examiner for doctoral dissertation x King’s College London: External examiner for doctoral dissertation

4.3.2 Recruitment support

x University of California, Irvine, Law School Provision of advice regarding candidate for appointment as Professor

x National Research University, Moscow, Higher School of Economics Member of Search Committee for Tenure-Track Professorial appointments in Law, 2014 4.4 External support provided to student competitions International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) International Humanitarian Law University Competition, National Finals, Israel Judge, November 2009

Ralph Wilde 6 Jessup International Law Moot Competition, international semi-finals, Washington DC Judge, March 1998 4.5 Ongoing posts at other universities Refugee Law Initiative, Human Rights Consortium, School of Advanced Studies, University of London (http://www.sas.ac.uk/rli/about-us/senior-research-associates/senior-research-associates) Senior Research Associate, since 2015 4.6 Visiting posts at other universities and academic institutions—teaching and supervision Course types:

x LLB: UK first law degree (taught at undergraduate level) x LLM: Second (‘Master’s’) law degree (taught at graduate level) x MA: Second (‘Master’s’) degree (taught at graduate level) x JD: US first law degree (taught at graduate level)

University of California in Los Angeles Law School

Visiting Professor, 2012 and 2019, delivering an intensive JD course for advanced law and international relations students, ‘Human Rights Beyond Borders’ https://law.ucla.edu/faculty/faculty-profiles/ralph-wilde/

Fundação Getulio Vargas, Faculdade de Direito, Rio de Janeiro

Visiting Professor, 2017 (January-March), delivering an intensive course for advanced law and international relations students, ‘Human Rights Beyond Borders’

Federal University of Paraiba, João Pessoa, Brazil

Visiting Professor, 2-10 March 2015, delivering an intensive course for advanced law and international relations students, ‘Human Rights Beyond Borders’

Academy of European Law, European University Institute, Florence

Delivered a series of 5 lectures as a Specialist Course on ‘The extraterritorial application of economic, social and cultural rights: problems and prospects’, June 2013 http://www.eui.eu/Documents/DepartmentsCentres/AcademyofEuropeanLaw/SummerSchoolProgrammes/ProgrammeHR2013.pdf

Melbourne University Law School

Senior Fellow, 2011 and 2013 delivering an intensive LLM course, ‘Human Rights Beyond Borders’ Central European University, Budapest

Visiting Faculty Member, 2011, teaching undergraduate public international law course. Xiamen Academy of International Law, P.R. China Visiting Professor, July 2010

Delivered a series of 10 lectures to undergraduate and graduate students and junior scholars, on ‘The extraterritorial application of human rights law’ http://www.xiamenacademy.org/products.aspx?ProductsCateID=149&CateID=149&CurrCateID=149&showCateID=149

Georgetown University Law Center

Adjunct Professor, teaching Public International Law JD course, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009

Ralph Wilde 7 University of Texas School of Law, Austin, Texas, USA

Visiting Professor, Fall Semester 2004 Teaching Public International Law JD course and a seminar JD course on International Territorial Administration and Trusteeship Over People in International Law Guest speaker on Domestic Violence and the Law course Visiting Faculty member of the University of Texas School of Law Human Rights Centre

University of Notre Dame School of Law (in London)

Visiting Professor, Summer Program, teaching International Human Rights Law JD course, 2004 Cambridge University

Guest Lecturer, European Human Rights Law LLB course, Law Faculty, 1999 – 2002 Supervisor in International Law for LLB students, Corpus Christi College, 1999 – 2002 Supervisor in International Law for LLB students, Trinity College, St. Edmund’s College, 2000 – 01

School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London

Guest Lecturer, Human Rights in the Developing World LLM course, Law Department, 2000 – 01 Institute for Commonwealth Studies, University of London Guest Lecturer, Human Rights Law and Practice MA course, 2000 – 01 London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), University of London Part-Time Lecturer in International Law, LLB small group teaching, Law Department, 1999–00 4.7 Visiting posts at other universities—research Harvard Law School

Visiting Fellow, Human Rights Programme, second semester, 2019 http://hrp.law.harvard.edu/visiting-fellows/ralph-wilde/ http://hrp.law.harvard.edu/staff/human-rights-program-awards-five-visiting-fellowships-for-2018-2019/

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)

Visiting Fellow, Law Department, 2018 and 2019 British School at Athens

Visiting Fellow, 2016-17 (December 2016 and April-May 2017) (http://www.bsa.ac.uk/index.php/33-featured-news/266-visiting-fellowship-2016-2017)

Al Quds University, Abu Dis, Palestine, Law Department

Visiting Senior Research Fellow, autumn 2015 Tel Aviv University, Israel, Faculty of Law

Visiting Research Professor, and Research Fellow in the Global Trust project, autumn 2015 Fundação Casa Rui Barbosa, Rio de Janeiro (http://www.casaruibarbosa.gov.br)

Pesquisador Visitante Sênior (Senior Visiting Researcher), 2012-14 http://www.casaruibarbosa.gov.br/interna.php?page=materia&ID_S=9&NM_Secao=not%C3%ADcias&ID_M=2194 http://www.casaruibarbosa.gov.br/dados/DOC/Curriculo/FCRB_Curriculo_RalphWilde.pdf

New York University Law School

Senior Global Research Fellow, and Visiting Fellow at the Institute for International law and Justice, Fall and Spring semesters, 2010-2011

Ralph Wilde 8 Yale Law School Henry Fellow and Visiting Scholar, 1997–1998 (also offered a Fulbright Scholarship) 4.8 Position at research charitable trust Leverhulme Trust (UK), Research Fellowship 2004 (see also ‘research funding’ section) http://www.leverhulme.org.uk/news/raac_awards_new/2004, page 8 4.9 Teaching—courses description Course types:

x LLB: UK first law degree (taught at undergraduate level) x LLM: Second (‘Master’s’) law degree (taught at graduate level) x MA: Second (‘Master’s’) degree (taught at graduate level) x JD: US first law degree (taught at graduate level)

4.9.1 Public International Law course Taught at:

x UCL: LLB course, part of the course, 2002-10 (Co-Convenor, 2003–4), forthcoming 2019 (as Convenor) x Cambridge University: LLB small group tutorials for Trinity, Corpus Christi and St Edmund’s Colleges, 1999-

2001 x Central European University, Budapest: undergraduate law degree course, as Convenor, 2011 x Georgetown University Law Center: summer course for JD students, as Convenor, 2005-9 x LSE: LLB small group tutorials, 1999-2000 x Texas University Law School: JD course, as Convenor, 2004

Formats: x Plenary large group lectures x Plenary seminar-style discussions x Small group tutorials/supervisions

Syllabus x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches

4.9.2 War Law (international law on the use of force and the law of armed conflict/IHL) Taught at:

x UCL: LLM course, as Convenor, 2007-10 Formats:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions x Small group tutorials/supervisions

Syllabus: x Completely reconceived the course, with greater attention given to the interplay between the ius ad bellum

and the ius in bello (hence the renaming of the course), the related activities of peace operations (including international territorial administration) and occupation, and the relevance of ‘other’ international law to the subject, notably UN law and human rights law

x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches 4.9.3 International Human Rights Law Taught at:

x UCL: LLM course, 2002-10 (Convenor, 2002–6 and forthcoming 2019) x Institute for Commonwealth Studies, University of London: guest lectures on MA course on ‘human rights

law and practice’, 2000-2001

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x SOAS, University of London: guest lectures on the LLM course on ‘human rights in the developing world’, 2000-2001

x University of Notre Dame Law School (in London): JD intensive summer course, as Convenor, 2004 Format:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions x Small group tutorials/supervisions

Syllabus x Completely reconceived the course on the basis of an innovative methodological approach integrating

interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches x Coverage of new, topical subjects of the application of human rights law extraterritorially and in times of war

and occupation 4.9.4 United Nations Law Taught at:

x UCL: LLM course, as Convenor, 2003 – 6 Format:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions x Small group tutorials/supervisions

Syllabus x Completely reconceived the course to include interdisciplinary approaches, notably from the field of

‘international relations’, and an innovative programme of guest expert lectures from a professor at the HEI in Geneva and a member of the legal team at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

x Coverage of new, topical subjects: the administration of territory by the UN, and the accountability of the UN

4.9.5 Human Rights Beyond Borders: the Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Law Taught at:

x University of California in Los Angeles Law School: intensive JD course, as Convenor, 2012 and 2019 x Fundação Getulio Vargas, Faculdade de Direito, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: intensive graduate law degree course,

as Convenor, 2017 x Federal University of Paraiba, João Pessoa, Brazil: intensive graduate law degree course, as Convenor, 2015 x European University Institute, Florence (summer course for law undergraduate and graduate students,

focusing on socio-economic rights), 2013 x Melbourne University: intensive LLM course, as Convenor, 2011 and 2013 x Xiamen Academy of International Law: summer course for law undergraduate and graduate students, and

early-career academics, 2010 Formats:

x Plenary large group lectures x Plenary seminar-style discussions x Small group tutorials/supervisions

Syllabus x The first ever provision of courses on this topical subject in any university in the world x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches

4.9.6 International Territorial Administration and Trusteeship Over People in International Law and Policy Taught at:

x Texas University Law School: JD seminar course, as Convenor, 2004 Format:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions

Ralph Wilde 10 Syllabus

x The first ever provision of a course on this topical subject in any university in the world x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches

4.9.7 The Law of the European Convention on Human Rights/European Human Rights Law Taught at:

x Cambridge University: guest lectures on LLB course, 1999-2002 x UCL: LLM course, on part of the course, 2008-10

Format: x Plenary seminar-style discussions

Syllabus x Coverage, as a new topic, of extraterritorial applicability

4.9.10 The Use of Force by States Taught at:

x UCL: LLM course, entire course, forthcoming 2019 Format:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions Syllabus

x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches 4.9.11 Decolonizing Law Taught at:

x UCL: LLM course, entire course, forthcoming 2019 Format:

x Plenary seminar-style discussions complemented by visits to museums, galleries, and to meet with government officials and NGOs.

Syllabus x Innovative methodological approach integrating interdisciplinary theoretical and historical approaches.

Assessment x Innovative, non-traditional assessments involving producing an ‘output for an audience’ (performance, short

story, etc.) with a reflection piece linking the output to the ideas covered in the course. (5) GOVERNMENTAL REPRESENTATION UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Lead UK representative at joint diplomatic meeting in Beijing, June 2004, between EU states and the Government of the People’s Republic of China on the PRC’s possible ratification of the UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Responsibilities included delivering a keynote speech discussing the UK’s experience of ratifying the Covenant, making a presentation on Article 2 and reservations to the Covenant, and discussing with Chinese officials various issues relating to ratification and the human rights situation in the PRC.

(6) PROVISION OF SPECIALIST GOVERNMENT TRAINING FOR DIPLOMATS UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Instructor, ‘Democracy, Human Rights and Good Governance’ course for diplomats, 2005, 2006, 2007 Instructor, ‘International law’ course for diplomats (teaching UN law), Cambridge University, 2011

(7) SERVICE ON GOVERNMENT ACADEMIC BODIES

Ralph Wilde 11 UK national university Research Excellence Framework (REF) assessment exercise

Member, Equality and Diversity Advisory Panel (EDAP) (https://www.ref.ac.uk/about/edap/), since 2018 UK Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) (research funding Council of the UK government)

Member, Peer Review College, 2014-7 (http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/Peer-Review-College/Pages/Peer-Review-College.aspx)

(8) GOVERNANCE OF AND SERVICE TO ACADEMIC AND PRACTITIONER ASSOCIATIONS Current British Institute of International and Comparative Law (BIICL) (http://www.biicl.org) Member, Advisory Panel on Public International Law, since 2006 International Law Association (global membership organization for international law experts) Member, International Committee on Human Rights in Times of Emergency, since 2018 Previous European Society of International Law (http://www.esil-sedi.eu)

Elected Member, Executive Board, 2012-16 Convenor of the ‘ESIL Lectures’ series: http://www.esil-sedi.eu/node/288 Convenor, mentoring event for early-career international lawyers to meet senior colleagues, Annual Meeting in Oslo 2015

Founding Member, Interest Group on Human Rights, 2013 Co-founding-chairperson and member of Co-ordination Committee, Interest Group on Peace and Security, 2007-12.

International Law Association (global membership organization for international law experts) Member of the Executive Council (one of two UK members), 2004-2011

Rapporteur, international Study Group on United Nations Reform, 2005-2011 (see Reports under Publications below) Member and Co-Rapporteur, international Committee on Human Rights Law, from 2009 (Member) 2010 (Co-Rapporteur) to 2012 British Branch: Joint Honorary Secretary and member of the Branch Council, 2004-2011. Responsibilities include membership policy and decision-making; organizing public seminars and the annual conference; facilitating the process of Branch nominations to international research committees; and convening, chairing and noting minutes for the Council and Annual General meetings

Peace Brigades International (PBI) UK Lawyers Committee Member, 2007-2011 American Society of International Law Member, Executive Council, 2006-2009 Co-Chair, International Organizations Interest Group, April 2004 – April 2007 Human Rights Lawyers Association, UK (http://www.hrla.co.uk/) Member of the executive Committee 2003-2009 (9) MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE OF A HUMAN RIGHTS CHARITY The Advice on Individual Rights in Europe (AIRE) Centre, London (www.airecentre.org)

x Member of the Management Committee and Board of Directors, 2000-2011

Ralph Wilde 12

x Trustee, 2002-2011 (10) GOVERNANCE OF EXTERNAL RESEARCH PROJECTS Legal Tools For Peace-Making Project, Cambridge University (http://www.lcil.cam.ac.uk/legal_tools/about-legal-tools-peace-making-project) Member, Advisory Board, since 2015 (11) EDITORIAL AND OTHER REVIEWING WORK Service on editorial boards Current London Review of International Law (peer-reviewed law journal published by OUP) (http://www.oxfordjournals.org/our_journals/lril) Member, Editorial Advisory Board, since March 2012 Cambridge International Law Journal (peer-reviewed law journal published by Edward Elgar, formerly called Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law and published by CUP) (http://www.cjicl.org.uk)

Member, Peer Review Editorial Board, since September 2011 Prim@ Facie (Law Journal of the Federal University of Paraiba, João Pessoa, Brazil) (http://periodicos.ufpb.br/ojs2/index.php/primafacie/index) Member, Conselho Editorial (Editorial Board), since 2016 Previous Current Legal Problems (peer-reviewed law periodical published by OUP) (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/clp/index.shtml?clp_volumes) Member, Editorial Advisory Board, 2007-13 Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding (peer-reviewed international relations journal published by Routledge) (http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/risb20) Member, International Editorial Advisory Board, 2006-12 Global Change, Peace & Security (peer-reviewed international relations journal published by Routledge) (http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cpar20) Member, Editorial Board, 2009-15 International & Comparative Law Quarterly (http://iclq.oupjournals.org) Joint Book Review Editor, 2004-2011 Yale Journal of International Law Member of the Editorial Board, 1997 – 1998 Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal Member of the founding Editorial Board, 1997 – 1998 Manuscript reviewing Provision of reviews of manuscripts of monographs and articles for publishers and academic journals, including Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Current Legal Problems, the International & Comparative Law Quarterly and the Modern Law Review

Ralph Wilde 13 Editorial support Amnesty International, International Secretariat

Consultant editor, 22 January 2004, on report: Making Rights a Reality: The Duty of States to Address Violence Against Women/Pour que les droits deviennent réalité. Les États ont le devoir de combattre la violence contre les femmes/Hacer los derechos realidad. El deber de los Estados de abordar la violencia contra las mujeres (June 2004, A.I. Doc. ACT 77/049/2004), obtainable from <http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engact770492004> (English) <http://web.amnesty.org/library/print/FRAACT770492004> (French) <http://www.amnistiainternacional.org/publica/hacer_derechos/indice.pdf> (Spanish)

(12) EXPERT LEGAL PRACTITIONER CONSULTANCY In my spare time, not as part of my full-time work at UCL, I act as legal consultant on issues of public international law, including the interface with municipal law (especially the law of England and Wales and US law). This work is performed in a private capacity and not on the basis of being a qualified legal professional in any jurisdiction, including the UK, or as an employee of UCL, or a member/appointee/employee of any other bodies. Cases R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, ex parte Bancoult Before the English Court of Appeal, February 2007

Consultant to the legal team of the Claimant/Respondent, Bancoult, on issues concerning the extraterritorial scope of human rights obligations in international law and under the UK Human Rights Act

R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, ex parte Quark Before the English Court of Appeal, 17 – 18 February 2004 (judgment given 29 April 2004); before the House of Lords, 11 – 12 July 2005 (judgment given 13 October 2005), application to the European Court of Human Rights declared in admissible, 2006

Consultant to the legal team of the Appellant, Quark, on issues concerning the extraterritorial scope of human rights obligations in international law and under the UK Human Rights Act

Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, Altenburg, Hemmingway, Hood & Bush Before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Civil Action No. 1:04-cv-1519-JR, decision of Judge James Robertson, 8 November 2004)

Counsel for 271 Amici Curiae (186 members of the UK parliament [including 5 former Law Lords], 85 current or former members of the European Parliament, and a Vice President of the European Commission) intervening in the first legal challenge to the military commissions used to try foreign nationals detained by the US at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba

A (FC) and others (FC) (Appellants) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent), X (FC) and another (FC) (Appellants) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent) [concerning the indefinite detention without trial of foreign terrorist suspects in Belmarsh prison] House of Lords, 16 December 2004, [2004] UKHL 56

Legal assistant to one of the Counsel for the appellants, Philippe Sands QC, responsible for preparing submissions regarding the legality in international law of derogations involving discrimination on grounds of nationality. 7 of the 9 Lordships held that the discrimination on this basis in the case breached international law. See the Opinion of Lord Bingham, paras. 45 – 70, esp. para. 69, sub-para (2) and the agreement by Lord Nichols, paras. 84 – 5; Lord Hope, para. 98; Lord Scott, para. 140; Lord Rodger, para. 190; Baroness Hale, para. 219 and Lord Carswell, para. 240

Ralph Wilde 14 Application for a Warrant for the Arrest and Extradition of Robert Gabriel Mugabe, President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, on charges of torture under Section 134 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 Before Bow Street Magistrate’s Court, 7 and 14 January 2004, decision of Judge Timothy Workman 14 January 2004 (unreported)

Expert witness called by the applicant (Peter Tatchell) on the law of state immunity in international law and English law, January 2004

Legal advice/opinion/amici curiae work (with others) Amici Curiae briefs regarding the travel bans introduced by President Trump, 2017:

- Brief of Amici Curiae International Law Scholars and Nongovernmental Organizations In Support of the

Plaintiffs in the Case of Donald J. Trump, et al., Petitioners, v. International Refugee Assistance Project, et al, Respondents, Case Nos. 16–1436 (16A1190) and 16–1540 (16A1191), US Supreme Court, August 2017

- State of Washington et al., Petitioners, v. Donald Trump, President of The United States, et al., Respondent, Case No. 2:17-cv-00141-JLR, submitted 15 March 2017

- Brief of Amici Curiae International Law Scholars and Nongovernmental Organizations In Support of the Plaintiffs in the Case of State of Washington et al., Petitioners, v. Donald Trump, President of The United States, et al., Respondent, Case No. 2:17-cv-00141-JLR, submitted 15 March 2017

- Brief of Amici Curiae International Law Scholars and Nongovernmental Organizations In Support of the Plaintiffs in the Case of Hameed Khalid Darweesh and Haider Sameer Abdulkhaleq Alshawi, Petitioners, v. Donald Trump, President of The United States; U.S. Department Of Homeland Security (“DHS”); U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”); John Kelly, Secretary of DHS; Kevin K. Mcaleenan, Acting Commissioner of DBP; and James T. Madden, New York Field Director, CBP, Respondents, Case No. 17 Civ. 480 (AMD), 15 February 2017.

Provision of commentary and legal advice to the United Nations Independent Expert on human rights and

international solidarity, Virginia Dandan, on her draft declaration on the international human right to solidarity being prepared for the UN Human Rights Council, 2015-7.

Provision of commentary to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and

Degrading Treatment or Punishment, Juan E. Méndez, on his draft thematic report on the extraterritorial reach of the international legal prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment, at an expert consultation meeting held on 9-10 July 2015 at American University, Washington College of Law, Washington DC.

Republic of Kosovo, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Provision of legal advice on legal and policy issues relating to Kosovo’s relations with states and participation in multilateral institutions, including the United Nations and the Council of Europe, 2013

Palestinian Negotiations Support Project (PNSI) (successor to the NSU, on which see below) at the Palestinian Liberation Organization Negotiation Affairs Department (http://www.nad-plo.org), Ramallah

Commissioned 2012-3 to provide advice on the range of options, and their legal and policy implications, for an international presence in Palestine following a peace agreement with Israel.

Negotiation Support Unit (NSU) at the Palestinian Liberation Organization Negotiation Affairs Department, (http://www.nad-plo.org), Ramallah

Commissioned 2008-11 to provide advice on the range of options, and their legal and policy implications, in relation to the future legal status of Jerusalem in general and the role of internationalization in a settlement for Jerusalem in particular.

Ralph Wilde 15 CARE International (global non-governmental humanitarian organization)

Commissioned November 2004 – June 2005 to write a report defining the UK Government’s obligations towards the fulfilment of human rights in developing countries, based on international human rights law and domestic law and policy. See ‘reports’ below.

Lawyers’ Committee for Human Rights (now Human Rights First) and the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture

Together with Professor James Crawford SC and Professor Philippe Sands QC, commissioned October 2002 – June 2003 to write a legal opinion on the conformity of the bilateral agreements sought by the USA relating to non-surrender to the International Criminal Court with international law generally and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in particular. For the opinion, see publications below.

(13) EARLY-CAREER APPOINTMENTS, WORK EXPERIENCE AND INTERNSHIPS United Kingdom National United Nations 50th Anniversary Commemorations Organizing Committee

x Member, 1993 United Nations Association, United Kingdom

x Chair, Youth Executive Committee, 1990 United Nations Second World Climate Conference, Geneva

x Youth Ambassador and keynote speaker, 1990 Aid/field work

x United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Dadaab refugee camps, Kenya, volunteer human rights monitor/instructor, Camp Sadako Programme (Whitworth Scholarship), Summer 1996

x Suncocret Humanitarian Agency, Varazdin refugee camps, Croatia, volunteer aid worker, June-July 1995 Research assistance experience

x Research Assistant, Professor W Michael Reisman, Yale Law School, 1997-8 x Research Assistant, Professor James Crawford SC, Cambridge University, summer 1999

Internships and work experience

x The Advice on Individual Rights in Europe (AIRE) Centre, London: Intern, European Court of Human Rights case work, 1997

x United Nations Headquarters, New York: Intern, June-July 1994 x United Kingdom Mission to the United Nations, New York: Summer Placement (internship), July 1994 x Office of Senator Edward Kennedy, United States Senate, Washington, D.C.: Intern, June-July 1993 (English

Speaking Union Scholarship) x Shearman & Sterling Law Firm, New York and London, Summer Associate, Litigation Department, 1998 x Fuzhou Number Three Middle School, Fuzhou, Fujian, P.R. China, High School teacher, January–May 1992

(14) INSTITUTIONAL/NETWORK MEMBERSHIP Constitutional and Administrative Law Bar Association (ALBA) (UK); Academic Council on the United Nations System (ACUNS); Association of Attenders and Alumni of the Hague Academy of International Law (AAA); American Society of International Law (ASIL); British Institute of International and Comparative Law (BIICL); British International Studies Association (BISA); Council for European Studies (CES); Consortium on Extraterritorial Obligations in relation to Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ETO-Consortium); International Association for the Study of Force Migration (IASFM); International Law and Politics Collaborative Research Network of the Law and Society Association;

Ralph Wilde 16 International Law Association (ILA) (British Branch); International Society for Military Law and the Law of War, UK Group; International Society of Public Law (ICON-S); London Transitional Justice Network; Socio-Legal Studies Association (SLSA) UK; Society of Legal Scholars (UK) (15) RESEARCH FUNDING European Research Council, Frontier Project Grant (formerly known as a ‘Starting Grant’) (see https://erc.europa.eu/funding-and-grants/funding-schemes/consolidator-grants) (in ‘Consolidator’ category), 2012 €1,111,752 See the next section ‘research projects’ Leverhulme Trust (UK), Philip Leverhulme Prize 2010 £70,000 The funds were used to provide research leave, and cover other research-related expenses. See also ‘prizes’ section above UK Arts and Humanities Research Council, Research Grant 2005 £111,828 (full amount applied for) See the next section ‘research projects’ Leverhulme Trust (UK), Research Fellowship 2004 £21,000 (maximum amount) to fund research assistance See http://www.leverhulme.org.uk/news/raac_awards_new/2004, page 8 British Academy, Small Grant 2004 £5,000 (maximum amount) to fund research assistance Nuffield Foundation (UK), Small Grant 2004 £7,500 (maximum amount) to fund research assistance (16) GLOBAL RESEARCH PROJECTS As project leader (e.g. ‘Principal Investigator’) Human Rights Beyond Borders: The extraterritorial application of international human rights law—comparative legal, historical and theoretical approaches, 2013-19

x Funded by a European Research Council, Frontier Project Grant (see above) x Project leader as Principal Investigator, managing a research assistant and administrative support. A

multidisciplinary enquiry into the topic x See here: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/research/groups-and-projects/human-rights-beyond-borders

The administration of territory by international organizations: how trusteeship and the civilizing mission went away, 2005-8

x Funded by a UK Arts and Humanities Research Council, Research Grant (see above) x Project leader as Principal Investigator x A multidisciplinary enquiry into the topic. x Led to several publications, listed separately herein, including the monograph with the same title (on which,

see also ‘prizes’ above) x Final project report was graded ‘outstanding’ by the Council’s assessors

United Nations Reform, 2006-11

Ralph Wilde 17

x Rapporteur of the Study Group on this topic of the International Law Association, the global membership organization of international law experts

x Managed a collaborative study of the topic by an international group of preeminent and highly distinguished international law experts on the subject

x Edited and published the joint report of the Study Group (see publications—reports, below) As project/platform member Exit Strategies and Peace Consolidation Research Group

x Member, 2007-2012 x International group of leading experts in the fields of international history, international relations and

international law on colonialism, occupation, peacekeeping and international territorial administration. Engaged in an innovative interdisciplinary comparative treatment of exits from a diverse range of related contemporary and historical forms of foreign intervention

x Group Convened by Professor Richard Caplan of Oxford University and funded by the Folke Bernadotte Academy of Sweden and the John Fell Oxford University Press Fund, 2007—2012

x Contributed a chapter to the published output of the Group (see publications—book chapters, below) United Nations University (UNU) project on ‘Legitimacy and International Law’

x Member, 2001-10 x Interdisciplinary, international group of expert scholars in international law and international relations x Project convened by Hilary Charlesworth, then of the Australian National University, and Jean-Marc Coicaud

of the UNU x See publications—book chapters, above, for final output

(17) GLOBAL RESEARCH NETWORKS/PLATFORMS/COLLABORATIONS As network/platform/collaboration leader Law and Society Collaborative Network on Queer Theory and Global Law

x Founding Convenor, 2017 x The network brings together and enables collaborative activities between a global group of scholars,

practitioners and activists on the subject x Convened a series of panels for network members at the 2018 and 2019 Law and Society Conferences x http://www.lawandsociety.org/crn.html#fiftyone

As network/platform/collaboration member High Level Panel on ‘State Party Collaborative Development Evaluation and Reporting Guidelines for use in evaluating the effectiveness of operational activities for development of the UN Development System in developing countries’ under the auspices of the Thabo Mbeki African Leadership Institute, University of South Africa, Pretoria

x Member, since 2019 x Interdisciplinary international expert network of experts producing a study on the subject of reporting

obligations by states under international human rights mechanisms, focusing on economic rights American Society of International Law Interest Group in Migration Law

x Founding member, since 2015 x Interdisciplinary international expert network of scholars and practitioners in the field of global migration

and law x Ongoing collaborative meetings and public engagement activities and publications, including a workshop at

the Rockefeller Centre, Bellagio, 2016 and the ‘Symposium on Framing Migration Law’ in American Journal of

Ralph Wilde 18

International Law: Unbound, 2017 (see ‘Unintended Consequences’ article, in publications—articles—shorter pieces, below).

UCL Migration Research Unit and Refuge in a Moving World Network

x Member, since 2016 x Both groups involve interdisciplinary collaboration on the subject of migration in general and refugees in

particular x http://www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/research/research-centres/migration-research-unit x http://www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/research/research-centres/migration-research-unit/refuge-in-a-moving-world-members

(18) PUBLICATIONS SSRN page: http://ssrn.com/author=518826 Books Published - International Territorial Administration: How Trusteeship and the Civilizing Mission Never Went Away (Oxford

University Press, 2008) ISBN 978-0-19-957789-7 (paperback) 978-0-19-927432-1 (hardback) [640 pages/300,000 words] <https://global.oup.com/academic/product/international-territorial-administration-9780199274321?cc=us&lang=en&>

Electronic version obtainable at: <http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/oso/public/content/law/9780199274321/toc.html> Winner of the Certificate of Merit (book prize) of the American Society of International Law, 2009. See <https://www.asil.org/sites/default/files/ASIL%20Book%20Awards.pdf> and (2010) 103 ASIL Proc. 519 Cited by Judge Cançado Trindade in his Separate opinion in the Advisory Opinion of the United Nations International Court of Justice on ‘Accordance with international law of the unilateral declaration of independence in respect of Kosovo’ of 22 July 2010 (page 20, note 56), obtainable here: <http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/index.php?p1=3&p2=4&k=21&case=141&code=kos&p3=4>

- (with Carol Devine and Carol Rae Hansen) Human Rights: The Essential Reference (Oryx Press, 1999)

[contribution of two chapters, listed below] Forthcoming—publication secured—works in progress - Human Rights Beyond Borders: International Legal Framework (Cambridge University Press 2019, to be

submitted 1 July 2019) [250,000 words, open access] - Human Rights Beyond Borders: Case Studies (Cambridge University Press 2020, to be submitted 1 July 2020)

[250,000 words, open access] - Human Rights Law Beyond Borders: Interdisciplinary Approaches (Cambridge University Press 2020, to be

submitted 1 January 2021) [250,000 words, open access] Forthcoming—publication secured—work to commence - Elements of Human Rights Law: Spatial, Personal and Territorial (Oxford University Press 2021, to be submitted 1

July 2021) [100,000 words] Book chapters (5,000 words and over)

Ralph Wilde 19 - ‘‘Anachronistic as Colonial Remnants May Be…’ Locating the rights of the Chagos Islanders: a case study of the

operation of human rights law in colonial territories’, Chapter 8 in Stephen Allen (ed.), Fifty Years of the British Indian Ocean Territory, 175-214 [40 pages/20,000 words] (Springer, 2018) (double blind peer review), available here: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10045057/ and here: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-78541-7_8

- ‘Dilemmas in promoting global economic justice through human rights law’ Chapter 5 in Nehal Bhuta (ed.), The Frontiers of Human Rights: Extraterritoriality and its Challenges, Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law (Oxford University Press, 18 February 2016, ISBN: 9780198769279), 127-175 [49 pages/25,000 words], Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence, full-text open access version obtainable here: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1477638/, information about the book here: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-frontiers-of-human-rights-9780198769279?prevSortField=1&sortField=8&start=0&resultsPerPage=20&prevNumResPerPage=20&lang=en&cc=gb#. Section of this chapter reproduced as:

- ‘Socio-economic rights, extraterritorially’, Chapter 9 in Community Obligations in Contemporary

International Law (Eyal Benvenisti and Georg Nolte (eds.), OUP, 2018) 381-395 (15 pages/8,000 words) pre-publication draft available at: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10045325/

- ‘The extraterritorial application of international human rights law on civil and political rights’, Chapter 35 in Nigel

Rodley and Scott Sheeran (eds), Routledge Handbook on Human Rights (Routledge, 2013), 635-61 [28 pages/15,000 words], open access chapter available here: <http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1412143/>, and here: http://www.etoconsortium.org/nc/en/main-navigation/library/documents/?tx_drblob_pi1%5bdownloadUid%5d=110> information about the book here: <http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415620734/>

- ‘Foreign territorial administration and international trusteeship over people: colonialism, occupation, the

mandates and trusteeship arrangements, and international territorial administration’, Chapter 16 in Nigel White (editor), Research Handbook on International Conflict and Security Law (2013, Edward Elgar) <http://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?id=14242> [36 pages/12,000 words]

- ‘Competing Normative Visions for Exit’, Chapter 14 in ‘Exit Strategies and State Building’ (Richard Caplan, ed., New York: Oxford University Press, 2012) 261-75 [15 pages/6700 words]

- ‘Understanding the International Territorial Administration Accountability Deficit: Trusteeship and the

Legitimacy of International Organizations’ [reproduction of an article in the Yearbook of International Peace Operations–see below] in

- Chapter 14, Andrew Clapham (ed.), Human Rights and Non-state Actors (Edward Elgar, 2013) 417-34 [18

pages/7,000 words] <http://www.e-elgar.co.uk/bookentry_main.lasso?id=14866>

- Jan Wouters, Eva Brems, Stefaan Smis and pierre Schmitt (eds.), Accountability for Human Rights Violations by International Organizations (Intersentia, 2010, ISBN 978-90-5095-746-5) [7,000 words]

- Gian Luca Beruto (ed.), International Humanitarian Law, Human Rights and Peace Operations (International Institute of Humanitarian Law, 2009) 155-170 [18 pages/7,000 words]

- ‘Compliance with human rights norms extraterritorially: ‘human rights imperialism’?’, Chapter 16 in International

Law and the Quest for its Implementation/Le droit international et la quête de sa mise en œvre, Liber Amicorum Vera Gowlland-Debbas (Laurence Boisson de Chazournes & Marcelo Kohen, eds., Brill/Martinus Nijhoff, 2010), ISBN 978-9004-17714-7, 319-348 [30 pages/15,000 words]

Ralph Wilde 20 - ‘Determining How the Legitimacy of Intervention Is Discussed: A Case Study of Depictions of International

Territorial Administration’, Ch. 11 in Hilary Charlesworth & Jean-Marc Coicaud (eds.), Fault Lines of International Legitimacy (Cambridge University Press, 2010) 327-359 [32 pages/14,600 words] [revised and updated version of the journal article ‘Representing international territorial administration: a critique of some approaches’ listed below]

- ‘Internationally Administered Territories’ in David Forsythe (ed.) Encyclopedia of Human Rights, Vol. 3 (OUP,

2009) 156-164 [9 pages/6,500 words], <http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Reference/Subjectareareference/SocialSciences/?view=usa&ci=9780195334029>

Encyclopedia awarded the ‘Dartmouth Medal’ by the American Library Association for a ‘reference work of outstanding quality and significance’. See <http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/rusa/awards/dartmouth/index.cfm>

- ‘From trusteeship to self-determination and back again: the role of the Hague Regulations in the evolution of

international trusteeship, and the framework of rights and duties of occupying powers,’ in Thomas Giegerich and Ursula E. Heinz (eds.), A Wiser Century?—Judicial Dispute Settlement, Disarmament and the Laws of War 100 Years after the Second Hague Peace Conference, Veröffentlichungen des Walther-Schücking-Instituts für Internationales Recht an der Universität Kiel, Band 173 (Duncker & Humblot, Berlin, 2009) 333-370 [38 pages/17,500 words] [also published as a journal article—see below]

- <Éviter les responsabilités juridiques? Les activités des États à l’etranger et l’Etat de droit>, Ch. 7 in François

Crépeau, Delphine Nakache et Idil Atak, Les migrations internationales contemporaines: Une dynamique complexe au coeur de la globalization (Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal, 2009, ISBN 978-2-7606-2125-1), 141-171 [31 pages/11,000 words] [updated, shorter version of ‘Legal Black Hole’ journal article, see below]

- ‘Are Human Rights Norms Part of the Jus Post Bellum, and Should They Be?’, Chapter 9 in Carsten Stahn and Jann

K. Kleffner (eds.), Jus Post Bellum: Towards a Law of Transition from Conflict to Peace (Cambridge University Press/T.M.C. Asser Press, 2008, ISBN 978-90-6704-272-7) 163-186 [24 pages/12,100 words]

- ‘Triggering State Obligations Extraterritorially: The Spatial Test in Certain Human Rights Treaties’, Ch. V in

Roberta Arnold and Noëlle Quénivet (eds.) International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law: Towards a New Merger in International Law (Brill/Martinus Nijhoff, Leiden/Boston, 2008, ISBN 978-90-04-16317-1) 133-153, obtainable from <http://www.nijhoffonline.nl/extract?id=nij9789004163171_nij9789004163171_1-608-38> [21 pages/10,100 words] [reproduction of a journal article–see below]

- ‘United Kingdom: Characteristics of International Administration in Crisis Areas’, in Outi Korhonen (ed.),

International Administration of Crisis Areas: Nine National Approaches (KDG Research & Publications, Helsinki, 2006, ISBN 978-952-99650-1-4), 169-98 [20 pages/8,200 words] also published online as ‘Characteristics of International Administration in Crisis Areas: Aspects of UK policy’, (2007) 10 (3) Electronic Journal of Comparative Law, obtainable from <http://www.ejcl.org/103/art103-15.pdf>

- ‘Colonialism redux? Territorial administration by international organizations, colonial echoes, and the legitimacy

of the ‘international,’’ Chapter 2 in Aidan Hehir & Neil Robinson (eds.), State Building: Theory and Practice (Routledge Advances in International Relations and Global Politics, Abingdon and New York, hardback 2007 ISBN 978-0-415-39435-2, paperback 2009 ISBN 978-0-415-54348-4) 29-49 [21 pages/7,800 words]

- ‘The Extraterritorial Application of the Human Rights Act’ in Jane Holder & Colm O’Cinneide (eds.) Current Legal

Problems 2005 (Oxford University Press, 2006), 47-81 [34 pages/12,000 words]

Ralph Wilde 21 - ‘International Territorial Administration and Human Rights’ Ch.7 in Nigel D. White & Dirk Klaasen (eds.), The UN,

human rights and post-conflict situations (Manchester University Press, 2005, ISBN 0719068665) 149-173 [25 pages/11,700 words]

- «De Guantánamo à Abu Ghraib. L’applicabilité des droits de l’homme aux activitiés extraterritoriales des États»

in Barbara Delcourt, Denis Duez et Eric Remacle (eds.), La guerre d’Irak. Prélude d'un nouvel ordre international? (P.I.E.—Peter Lang, Bruxelles, 2004, ISBN 90-5201-265-2), 87-125 [39 pages/28,700 words], published in English as ‘From Guantánamo Bay to Abu Ghraib: The applicability of international human rights law to the post-9/11 extraterritorial activities of states,’ Chapter 11 in Paul Eden and Thérèse O’Donnell (eds), 11 September 2001: A Turning Point in International and Domestic Law? (Transnational Publishers, Ardsley, New York, 2005, ISBN 1-57105-326-3), 255-334 [79 pages/28,700 words] [a later, more expanded version of the ideas in this piece was published as the ‘Legal Black Hole’ article, below]

- ‘An analysis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,’ Chapter 3 in Carol Devine, Carol Rae Hansen and

Ralph Wilde, Human Rights: The Essential Reference (Oryx Press, 1999), 73-116 [43 pages/ 21,700 words] - ‘An overview of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,’ Chapter 2 in Carol Devine, Carol Rae Hansen and

Ralph Wilde, Human Rights: The Essential Reference (Oryx Press, 1999), 59-72 [14 pages/6,000 words] Joint authored - (with Barbara Delcourt) «Le retour des «protectorats». L'irrésistible attrait de l'administration des territoires

étrangers» in Barbara Delcourt, Denis Duez et Eric Remacle (eds.), La guerre d’Irak. Prélude d'un nouvel ordre international? (P.I.E.—Peter Lang, Bruxelles, 2004), 219-47 [29 pages/14,000 words]

Forthcoming—publication secured—submitted, at editing stage - ‘On the migration and refugee ‘crisis’, international law, and the backlash against human rights’ Chapter in War,

Occupation and Refugees (Tom Syring, ed., Routledge, forthcoming 2019) (double blind peer-reviewed) [25,000 words]

Forthcoming—publication secured—works in progress - ‘Refugee Camps’, Chapter in Oxford Handbook on Refugee Law (Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster and Jane

McAdam eds., OUP, forthcoming 2019, to be submitted 29 April 2019) (double blind peer-review) [8,000 words]

- ‘Extra-Territorial Obligations and Economic and Social Rights’, Chapter in Oxford Handbook on Economic and Social Rights (Malcolm Langford & Katharine G. Young, eds., OUP, forthcoming 2019, to be submitted 21 October 2019) (double blind peer-reviewed) [8,000 words]

- ‘Obligations Arising in the Protection of Social Rights Abroad: International Cooperation and Assistance and the

Extraterritorial Scope of Application’, Chapter in Research Handbook on International Law and Social Rights (C. Binder, F. Piovesan, A. Úbeda de Torres, J.A. Hofbauer eds., Edward Elgar, forthcoming 2019, to be submitted 15 April 2019) (double blind peer-reviewed) [8,000 words]

Journal/periodical articles (5,000 words and over) - ‘Human Rights Beyond Borders at the World Court: The Significance of the International Court of Justice’s

Jurisprudence on the Extraterritorial Application of International Human Rights Law Treaties’ Chinese Journal of International Law (2013) 12(4) 639-677 [39 pages/17,000 words] http://tinyurl.com/mndylwm

https://academic.oup.com/chinesejil/article/12/4/639/354321 - ‘From Trusteeship to Self-Determination and Back Again: the Role of the Hague Regulations in the Evolution of

International Trusteeship, and the Framework of Rights and Duties of Occupying Powers,’ (2009) 31 Loyola of Los

Ralph Wilde 22

Angeles International and Comparative Law Review 75-132, <http://ilr.lls.edu/documents/WILDEFINAL3-29.pdf> [58 pages/26,000 words] [updated, extended version of a book chapter—see above]

- ‘Complementing Occupation Law? Selective judicial treatment of the suitability of human rights norms’, (2009)

42(1) Israel Law Review 80-100 and on SSRN as Hebrew University International Law Research Paper No. 18-09: <http://ssrn.com/abstract=1488819> [21 pages/10,500 words]

- ‘Kosovo 2008: Independence, recognition and international law’ V(2) (July 2008) Soochow Journal of

International Law 50-82 [32 pages/11,000 words] [longer version of Chatham House e-publication—see below under shorter pieces]

- ‘Understanding the International Territorial Administration Accountability Deficit: Trusteeship and the

Legitimacy of International Organizations’ (2008) 12 International Peacekeeping: The Yearbook of International Peace Operations 93-110 (Nijhoff) [18 pages/7,000 words] [reprinted as book chapters–see above]

- ‘Triggering State Obligations Extraterritorially: The Spatial Test in Certain Human Rights Treaties’, (2007) 40(2)

Israel Law Review 503-526 and on SSRN as Hebrew University International Law Research Paper No. 17-07: <http://ssrn.com/abstract=1032874> [24 pages/10,100 words] [reprinted as a book chapter–see above]

- ‘Enhancing accountability at the international level: the tension between international organization and member

state responsibility and the underlying issues at stake’ (2006) 12(2) ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law 395 – 415 [20 pages/9,100 words]

- ‘Legal “Black Hole”?: Extraterritorial state action and international treaty law on civil and political rights’ (2005)

26(3) Michigan Journal of International Law 739 – 806 [68 pages/32,000 words] - ‘The applicability of international human rights law to the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) and foreign

military presence in Iraq’ (2005) 11 (2) ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law 485 – 95 [10 pages/5,700 words]

- ‘The ‘Legal Space’ or ‘Espace Juridique’ of the European Convention on Human Rights: Is it Relevant to

Extraterritorial State Action?’ (2005) 2 European Human Rights Law Review 115 – 124 [10 pages/5,100 words] - ‘Representing international territorial administration: a critique of some approaches,’ (2004) 15(1) European

Journal of International Law 71–96 and at SSRN: <http://ssrn.com/abstract=803818> [26 pages/12,300 words] [revised version published as ‘Setting the terms of the debate on the legitimacy of intervention: a case study of depictions of international territorial administration’ listed in book chapters above]

- ‘From Danzig to East Timor and Beyond: the Role of International Territorial Administration,’ (2001) 95(3)

American Journal of International Law 583 – 606, obtainable here <http://www.jstor.org/stable/2668494?origin=JSTOR-pdf> [24 pages/16,700 words]

Cited by Judge Cançado Trindade in his Separate opinion in the Advisory Opinion of the United Nations International Court of Justice on ‘Accordance with international law of the unilateral declaration of independence in respect of Kosovo’ of 22 July 2010 (page 20, note 52), obtainable here: <http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/index.php?p1=3&p2=4&k=21&case=141&code=kos&p3=4>

- ‘The Refugee Convention at 50 – Forced Migration Policy in the new Century,’ (2001) 14(2) Journal of Refugee

Studies 135 – 150, obtainable from <http://www3.oup.co.uk/refuge/hdb/Volume_14/Issue_02/pdf/140135.pdf> [16 pages/7,900 words]

- ‘The complex role of the legal adviser when international organizations administer territory,’ American Society of

International Law, Proceedings of the 95th Annual Meeting (2001) 251 – 261 [11 pages/5,200 words]

Ralph Wilde 23 - ‘Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes?: Why and How UNHCR Governance of “Development” Refugee Camps Should Be

Subject to International Human Rights Law,’ 1 Yale Human Rights & Development Law Journal 107 – 128 (1998), available at http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=yhrdlj [21 pages/10,800 words]

Joint authored - (with Matthew Craven, Gerry Simpson & Susan Marks) ‘We are teachers of international law’ (2004) 17(2) Leiden

Journal of International Law 363 – 374 [12 pages/6,000 words] Forthcoming—works in progress—publication to be arranged - ‘Same, same but different: the relationship between concepts of ‘jurisdiction’ in human rights law and general

international law’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, 2019, completion due 22 April 2019) [15,000 words] - ‘Custom, extraterritoriality and cyberspace’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, 2019, completion due 23

Dec 2019) [20,000 words] - ‘Diplomatic Asylum in Human Rights Law’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, 2019, completion due 16

December 2019) [20,000 words]

- ‘Subsidiarity reversed: the primacy of international human rights review in extraterritorial situations,’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, 2019, to be completed 4 November 2019) [20,000 words]

- ‘Queering (extra-)territoriality’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, 2019, to be completed 2 December

2019) [20,000 words]

- ‘The international legal academy must fall? Reflections on international legal controversies’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, completion due 18 November 2019) [20,000 words]

- ‘Using the master’s tools to dismantle the master’s house: the politics of strategies using occupation law and

human rights law to resist occupations’ (to be submitted to a peer-review journal, completion due 28 October 2019) [10,000 words]

- ‘Recognition and human rights obligations in customary international law and United Nations law’ (to be

submitted to a peer-review journal, completion due 8 July 2019) [20,000 words] Shorter pieces (less than 5,000 words) - ‘The Trusteeship Council,’ Chapter 9 in Thomas G. Weiss & Sam Daws (eds.), The Oxford Handbook on the United

Nations (Oxford University Press, 2nd Edition, 2018), 178-189 [12 pages/4,600 words]

- ‘The Unintended Consequences of Expanding Migrant Rights Protections’ (2017) 111 American Journal of International Law Unbound 487-491, obtainable at https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2018.21 [5 pages/3300 words]

- ‘When forced migrants decide to make perilous sea crossings: the causal role of international law,’ American Society of International Law, 166 Proceedings of the 110th Annual Meeting: Adapting to a Changing World (2017, American Society of International Law) 166-9 [4 pages/2000 words], obtainable here: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1503864/ [also a video, see below]

- Introductory remarks, commentary and questions in ‘What the Kosovo Advisory Opinion Means for the Rest of

the World’, Proceedings of the 105th [2011] Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law (2012) 259-74 [2000 words]

Ralph Wilde 24 - ‘After Gender: An Overview’, (2011) 31 Pace Law Review 882-6 [5 pages/1,600 words] - ‘Accordance with International Law of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence in Respect of Kosovo—

International Decision commentary’, (2011) 105(2) American Journal of International Law 301-7, obtainable from <http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/10.5305/amerjintelaw.105.2.0301.pdf?acceptTC=true> (JSTOR access required) (8 pages/3,700 words)

Reproduced as ‘Kosovo (Advisory Opinion)’ in Rudiger Wolfrum (ed.), Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law (Oxford University Press, e-version online 2011, <http://www.mpepil.com/ViewPdf/epil/entries/law-9780199231690-e1307.pdf?stylesheet=EPIL-display-full.xsl>, print version 2012, volume VI, p. 604-9) [6 pages/4,600 words]

- ‘Remarks’ (on the extraterritorial application of human rights law), American Society of International Law,

Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting (2011) 110-3 [4 pages/2000 words] - ‘Self-determination, Secession and Dispute Settlement after the Kosovo Advisory Opinion’, (2011) 24 Leiden

Journal of International Law 149-154, obtainable from <http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=1&pdftype=1&fid=8070856&jid=LJL&volumeId=24&issueId=&aid=8070854> (6 pages, 2,900 words)

- ‘Recognition in International Law’, paper presented at Chatham House (the Royal Institute of International

Affairs), London, 4 February 2010, contained in ‘Recognition of States: the Consequences of Recognition or Non-Recognition in UK and International Law’, International Law Discussion Group Summary, Chatham House, obtainable from <http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/files/16184_040210il.pdf> 2-11 [10 pages/4,000 words]

- Case Note, R (Al-Skeini) v Secretary of State for Defence (The Redress Trust intervening) (2008) 102(3) American

Journal of International Law 628-634 [7 pages/3,600 words] <http://www.jstor.org/pss/20456651> - ‘Kosovo—Independence, Recognition and International Law’, paper presented at Chatham House (the Royal

Institute of International Affairs), London, 22 April 2008, contained in ‘Kosovo: International Law and Recognition’, Discussion Group Summary, Chatham House, obtainable from <http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/files/11547_il220408.pdf>, 8-20 [13 pages/4,790 words] [longer version published as a journal article – see above]

- ‘The Trusteeship Council,’ Chapter 8 in Thomas G. Weiss & Sam Daws (eds.), The Oxford Handbook on the United

Nations (Oxford University Press, 2007), 149-159 [11 pages/4,600 words] - ‘The Role of International Institutions in Territorial Administration and Post-Conflict Justice – Introductory

Remarks,’ in Agata Fijalkowski (ed.) International Institutional Reform, 2005 Hague Joint Conference on Contemporary Issues of International Law (2007, T.M.C.Asser Press/CUP), 83 – 4 [2 pages/500 words]

- ‘Human rights movements’ in Roland Robertson and Jan-Aart Scholte (eds.), Encyclopedia of Globalization

(Routledge 2006) Vol. 2, 596-600 [5 pages/2,700 words] - ‘Casting Light on the ‘Legal Black Hole’: Some Political Issues at Stake’ (2006) 5 European Human Rights Law

Review 552 – 7 [6 pages/3,000 words]

- ‘Legitimacy and Accountability of International Administrations: A Commentary on Four Papers,’ [12 pages/4,100 words] European Society of International Law website, since 2005, <http://www.esil-sedi.eu/fichiers/en/WildeComment_206.pdf>

Ralph Wilde 25 - ‘The post-colonial use of international territorial administration and issues of legitimacy,’ American Society of

International Law, Proceedings of the 99th Annual Meeting (2005) 38 – 42 [5 pages/2,500 words] - ‘Self-determination in international law and the position of Montenegro,’ in Sanja Elezovic (ed.), Legal Aspects

for Referendum in Montenegro in the Context of International Law and Practice (Foundation Open Society Institute, Representative Office Montenegro, 2005), 25 – 36 [12 pages/4,900 words] [obtainable from <www.osim.cg.yu>]

- ‘The accountability of international organizations and the concept of “functional duality”’ in Wybo P. Heere (ed.),

From Government to Governance. The Growing Impact of Non State Actors on the International and European Legal System. Proceedings of the Sixth Hague Joint Conference held in The Hague, The Netherlands (T.M. Asser Press/Cambridge University Press, 2004), 164 – 170 [7 pages/3,400 words] [see also reported/broadcast remarks, below]

- ‘The United Nations as government: the tensions of an ambivalent role,’ American Society of International Law,

Proceedings of the 97th Annual Meeting (2003) 212 – 15 [4 pages/2,300 words] - ‘Taxonomies of international peacekeeping – an alternative narrative,’ (2003) 9(2) ILSA Journal of International &

Comparative Law 391 – 8 [8 pages/3,600 words] - ‘The skewed responsibility narrative of the ‘failed states’ concept,’ (2003) 9(2) ILSA Journal of International &

Comparative Law 425 – 9 [5 pages/2,000 words] - ‘The effect of territorial administration by international organizations on local community-building,’ (2003) 2000

– 2003 Third World Legal Studies Journal 239 – 49 [11 pages/2,400 words] - ‘Accountability and international actors in Bosnia, Kosovo and East Timor,’ (2001) 7 ILSA Journal of International

& Comparative Law 455 – 460 [6 pages/2,400 words] - ‘From Bosnia to Kosovo and East Timor: the Changing Role of the United Nations in the Administration of

Territory,’ (2000) 6 ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law 467 – 71 [5 pages/2,100 words] - ‘The ambivalent mandates of international organizations in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and East Timor,’ in

Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the Australian & New Zealand Society of International Law and the American Society of International Law (2000), 319-321, available at <http://www.law.usyd.edu.au/scigl/anzsil/Conferences/2000ASILProceedings.pdf> [3 pages/1,800 words]

- ‘The Prospects for an Asia-Pacific Human Rights System,’ 1 Yale Human Rights & Development Law Journal 137 –

142 (1998), available at <http://www.yale.edu/yhrdlj/index_enhanced.htm> [6 pages/3,200 words] Joint authored - (with W. Michael Reisman) ‘The History and Background of Article 19,’ in World Press Freedom Committee (ed.),

Everyone Has the Right: The Enduring Importance For a Free Press of Article 19, Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1998) 35 – 46, obtainable from <http://www.wpfc.org/site/docs/pdf/Publications/Everyone%20Has%20the%20Right-Text.pdf> [12 pages/4,800 words]

Forthcoming—in press - Introduction, ‘Allott, Eunomia: New Order for a New World, 1990,’ British Institute of International and

Comparative Law, British Contributions to International Law 1915-2015 (forthcoming, 2019, Brill) [1 page, 500 words]

Ralph Wilde 26 - ‘International recognition and human rights treaties,’ Chapter 8 in Routledge Handbook of State Recognition

(Gëzim Visoka, John Doyle, Edward Newman, eds., Routledge, forthcoming 2019) (double blind peer-reviewed) [6,000 words]

Forthcoming—publication secured—work in progress - ‘Inter-State Claims (ECHR)’ (forthcoming, Max Planck Encyclopedia of International Procedural Law (EiPro)) [4000

words] (to be submitted 7 October 2019) Legal opinions and submissions - (with others) Submission to the UK Iraq Enquiry, on the UK’s Legal Justification for the Iraq War and Lord

Goldsmith’s Legal Advice, 6 August 2010 [7 pages], posted on <http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/interactive/2010/oct/04/submission-iraq-inqury-akande-milanovic>

- (With James Crawford SC and Philippe Sands QC), Joint Opinion for Human Rights First (then called the Lawyers’

Committee for Human Rights) and the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture, ‘In the Matter of the Statute of the International Criminal Court, and in the Matter of Bilateral Agreements Sought by the United States Under Article 98(2) of the Statute,’ 5 June 2003, obtainable from <http://www.amicc.org/docs/Art98-14une03FINAL.pdf> [28 pages/10,500 words]

Reports - (as editor and providing the introduction) United Nations Reform Through Practice: Report of the International

Law Association Study Group on United Nations Reform (December 2011), obtainable from <http://ssrn.com/abstract=1971008> and <http://www.ila-hq.org/en/committees/study_groups.cfm/cid/0> [79 pages/37,000 words]

- UK Government human rights obligations in developing countries, Report for CARE International, June 2005 [unpublished] [271 pages/108,500 words]

- ‘Message from the Co-Chairs,’ International Organizations Bulletin: Newsletter of the International Organizations

Interest Group of the American Society of International Law 1 – 3 (Spring 2005) - ‘Recent Developments in the Security Council: Authorizing International Administration in Kosovo & East Timor,’

International Organizations Bulletin: Newsletter of the International Organizations Interest Group of the American Society of International Law 12 – 13 (Spring 2001), obtainable from <http://www.nesl.edu/center/asilnews/spr01.pdf> [2 pages/1,400 words]

- ‘The 7th International Research and Advisory Panel of the International Association for the Study of Forced

Migration,’ 10 Forced Migration Review 56 (2001), obtainable from <http://www.fmreview.org/MAG1_PDFS/FMR%2010%20-%20pdf's/FMR%20-10.19.pdf> [1 page/500 words]

- ‘Should There Be An Independent and Permanent International Criminal Court?,’ in Law Society of England &

Wales, Graham Turnbull Essay Competition 1998/9 (1999) [7 pages/3,000 words] - Beyond the Yoke: Women’s Rights in the Dadaab Refugee Camps of Kenya (Parliamentary Human Rights

Committee, United Kingdom, 1997), on file at the United Kingdom Parliament House of Commons Library Joint authored

Ralph Wilde 27 - Geneviève Boutin, Désirée McGraw, Carlos Santiso, Joseph Vorbach & Ralph Wilde, eds., Policy Brief: Innovations

in Global Governance (Academic Council on the UN System, 2001), obtainable from <http://www.acuns.wlu.ca/publications/Policy_Brief/Policy_Brief/policy.brief.pdf> [13 pages/3,600 words]

Book reviews - Book review, 13 (1) International Journal of Refugee Law 274 – 6 (2001) (reviewing Jennifer Hyndman, Managing

Displacement: Refugees And the Politics of Humanitarianism [2000]) [3 pages/900 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 604 – 606 (1998) (reviewing James Hathaway (ed.)

Reconceiving International Refugee Law [1997]) [3 pages/1,300 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 601 – 604 (1998) (reviewing Malcolm Shaw, International Law

[1997]) [4 pages/1,200 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 606 – 609 (1998) (reviewing Malcolm Evans, Religious Liberty

And International Law In Europe [1997]) [4 pages/1,200 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 599 – 601 (1998) (reviewing Alfred Rubin, Ethics and Authority

in International Law [1998]) [3 pages/1,300 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 295 – 7 (1998) (reviewing William Zartman & Lewis Rasmussen

(eds.), Peacemaking in International Conflict [1997]) [3 pages/1,100 words] - Book review, 23 Yale Journal of International Law 291 – 2 (1998) (reviewing Anthony D’Amato, International Law

Studies: Collected Papers Vol. 2 [1997]) [2 pages/800 words] Journalism and other commentary - ‘Comment: The Distinction Between Foreign and International Law,’ American Society of International Law

Insight, posted 2 November 2005 at <http://www.asil.org/insights/2005/10/insights051031a.html> - ‘Human rights have a long way to grow,’ The Times Newspaper (London), 8 Dec. 1998, 14 - ‘Interning on Capitol Hill,’ Concord Magazine (English Speaking Union, London), Sept. 1993 - ‘The Second World Climate Conference’ New World (United Nations Association, London), Jan./Feb. 1991, 6 Public statements and open letters - (with others), <<Contre une invocation abusive de la légitime défense pour faire face au défi du terrorisme – A

plea against the abusive invocation of self-defence as a response to terrorism>>, 10 September 2016, obtainable here: http://cdi.ulb.ac.be/contre-invocation-abusive-de-legitime-defense-faire-face-defi-terrorisme/

- (as convenor, with Başak Çalı, Cathryn Costello and Guy Goodwin-Gill), ‘Open Letter from International Lawyers to the Peoples of Europe, the European Union, EU Member States and their Representatives on the Justice and Home Affairs Council, on the Refugee Crisis in Europe’ issued in September 2015, obtainable here: http://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/open-letter1.pdf

- (with others) ‘Statement Calling for Solutions to End the Warehousing of Refugees,’ U.S. Committee for Refugees, undated (June 2005), obtainable from <http://www.anafe.org/IMG/pdf/appel_europeen_lance_par_u.s.ve.pdf>

Ralph Wilde 28 - (with others) open letter to the UK Prime Minister concerning the conflict between Hamas and Israel,

reproduced as a letter in The Guardian Newspaper (UK), 14 January 2009, obtainable from <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/14/gaza-israel-palestine-letters> [n.b. the title and sub-title to the letter on this webpage were added by the Guardian without the agreement of the signatories and were not part of the original letter]

- (with others) ‘War would be illegal,’ open letter to the UK Prime Minister, reproduced as a letter in The Guardian

Newspaper (UK), 7 March 2003, obtainable from <http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,909314,00.html>. See also ‘We are teachers of international law’ journal article, above

Oral history testimony - Pages 88-92 of the section ‘Wilde, Greenhalgh & Parry v United Kingdom (1993-1995)’ in Paul Johnson, Going to

Strasbourg: An Oral History of Sexual Orientation Discrimination and the European Convention on Human Rights (OUP, 2016), https://goingtostrasbourg.com/

Reported/broadcast/webcast remarks - Video of the opening discussion of the ESIL 2018 Annual Conference “International Law and Universality”

between Christine Chinkin and Hilary Charlesworth, mediated by myself, published 20 Feb 2019, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xi8VKk7dZts

- ‘Postcolonial approaches to the extraterritorial application of human rights law’, lecture at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, Brazil, 13 December 2018, video here: https://tinyurl.com/y79yvenc

- ‘Subsidiarity reversed: the primacy of international human rights review in extraterritorial situations,’ Cambridge

University, Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, in collaboration with the Athens Public International Law Centre, workshop, ‘Rethinking Reparations in International Law’, Panel 7: New Issues in Reparations, 17 November 2018, audio available here, https://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/2870677?format=mp3&quality=high, remarks at the 17:10 point.

- TV Interview on the case brought by Palestine against the USA before the International Court of Justice,

concerning the recognition of Jerusalem, Al Jazeera International (English), 29 September 2018. Report of the interview here: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/09/palestine-sues-international-court-jerusalem-embassy-180929121629965.html

- ‘Beyond the state sovereignty paradigm: the case of overlapping responsibilities involving non-sovereign actors’ public lecture at the Manchester International Law Centre, 31 October 2017, video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhlbsskYm_w

- Quoted in Julie Vanderperre, ‘Can a Trusteeship Rescue South Sudan? Unlikely, Experts Say,’ 22 February 2017,

PassBlue, http://www.passblue.com/2017/02/22/can-a-trusteeship-rescue-south-sudan-unlikely-experts-say/

- TV Report of public lecture, on the law and politics of migration and refugee protection, TN news programme on the TVU channel, Chile, 29 August 2016, posted here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXKC_LS0TNo&feature=youtu.be&app=desktop

- TV Interview on the publication of the Chilcot Report on the War in Iraq, Al Jazeera International (English), 6 July 2016

Ralph Wilde 29 - ‘Diplomatic asylum and the Julian Assange case’ presentation at: L’art de la fuite. Les coulisses de l’affaire

Assange, Séminaire exclusif avec Julian Assange, Centre de Droit Public, Centre de droit international, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Bruxelles, 30 May 2016, http://droit-public.ulb.ac.be/lart-de-la-fuite-les-coulisses-de-laffaire-assange/; video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHYs78uIx3M [remarks at 2:27:23]

- ‘When forced migrants decide to make perilous sea crossings: the causal role of international law’, presentation broadcast on the ‘Migrants at Sea: What Role for International Law?’ panel, Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law, Washington, DC, 31 March 2016, videos at: https://www.asil.org/resources/2016-annual-meeting https://www.ucl.ac.uk/stream/media/swatch?v=c6411e9fdf9c

- Remarks about Angelina Jolie Pitt’s speech on the global refugee system and the realities of who is impacted on by migration the most on the BBC World Service ‘World Have Your Say’ programme, 16 May 2016 (at the 39 minutes 3 seconds mark): <http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03tknxh>

- Interview on BBC World News television, ‘Global’ programme, on the international law of statehood, 18 November 2014: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Yia4zhbE7M&index=2&list=PLu5fzN_S4dA3II5LZYlufL0zlOGNFa6P3> <https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B73HNunPjuAueDZoN016TUg0MUU/view?usp=sharing> (remarks at around the 7 and 10 minute marks)

- Podcast interview on international law, ‘Externadoradio’ of Universidad Externado de Colombia, series ‘001 -

DERECHO A LA CARTA’, podcast ‘124 - EXTRATERRITORIALIDAD DE LOS DD HH’, 2015, http://www.spreaker.com/user/externadoradio/124-extraterritorialidad-de-los-dd-hh, and http://tinyurl.com/qc4drtn

- Interview on BBC Radio 4’s ‘The World Tonight’ on the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion on the

legality of Kosovo’s independence declaration, 30 November 2009, obtainable at the following link: <http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00p1mwv> (the interview is around the 36.10 minutes mark )

- Participation in roundtable event on ‘International law as reported by the media’ held in Portcullis House, UK

Parliament, October 2009, contained at the following link: <http://www.justjournalism.com/special-reports/view/international-law-as-reported-in-the-media-roundtable-event-summary>

- Interview on BBC Radio 4’s ‘The World Tonight’ on the international law of self-determination, 22 April 2009: <http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/worldtonight/2009/04/state_rights_vs_human_rights.html> - Question to the US Secretary of State, Condoleeza Rice, American Society of International Law Annual Meeting,

Washington, D.C., 29 March 2006, obtainable from <https://2001-2009.state.gov/secretary/rm/2006/63855.htm>

- ‘Review of Application of Principles of Good Governance by International Organizations in Practice’ panel

discussion, p.171 – 2 in ‘Wybo P. Heere (ed.), From Government to Governance. The Growing Impact of Non State Actors on the International and European Legal System. Proceedings of the Sixth Hague Joint Conference held in The Hague, The Netherlands (T.M. Asser Press/Cambridge University Press, 2004)

Blogs - ‘Let them drown’: Rescuing migrants at sea and the non-refoulement obligation as a case study of international

law’s relationship to ‘crisis’, European Journal of International Law, EJIL: Talk! blog, Part I, http://www.ejiltalk.org/let-them-drown-rescuing-migrants-at-sea-and-the-non-refoulement-obligation-as-a-case-study-of-international-laws-relationship-to-crisis-part-i/, posted 25 February 2017; Part II,

Ralph Wilde 30

http://www.ejiltalk.org/let-them-drown-rescuing-migrants-at-sea-and-the-non-refoulement-obligation-as-a-case-study-of-international-laws-relationship-to-crisis-part-ii/, posted 27 February 2017 [4,138 words in total]

- ‘Ruti Teitel’s ‘Humanity’s Law’, posted on Opinio Juris, 28 October 2011,

<http://opiniojuris.org/2011/10/28/17749/>

- ‘When International Law Works – But for whom?’ (about When International Law Works by Tai Heng Cheng), posted on Opinio Juris, 13 March 2012, <http://opiniojuris.org/2012/03/13/when-international-law-works-but-for-whom>

Twitter https://twitter.com/ralphwilde (19) INVITED LECTURES (CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS LISTED SEPARATELY IN FOLLOWING SECTION) Beyond the state sovereignty paradigm: the case of overlapping responsibilities involving non-sovereign actors

Public Lecture, Manchester International Law Centre, 31 October 2017 (for video, see ‘reported/broadcast remarks’ above). International law and the migration ‘crisis’

Public Lecture, Federal Tribunal of Justice, Natal, Brasil, 12 December 2018 (https://www.jfrn.jus.br/siteAdm/ExibirImagem?id=7867 and https://www.jfrn.jus.br/noticia.xhtml?idNoticia=15408)

Lecture, UNICURITIBA, Curitiba, Brasil, 28 August 2017 Lecture, Istanbul University Faculty of Law, 12 July 2017 Public Lecture, British School in Athens, 24 April 2017, https://www.facebook.com/events/1939890939575810/ Lecture, Faculdadae Baiana de Direito, Salvador, Brasil, 23 March 2017 Lecture, University of Athens Faculty of Law, 20 December 2016 Lecture, Faculdade de Direito, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, 25 November 2016 Public Lecture, Faculty of Law, Birzeit University, Ramallah, 3 November 2016 Lecture, Union University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade, 17 October 2016 Lecture, annual retreat, Volterra Fietta law firm (UK), 16 September 2016

Public Lecture, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Faculdade de Direito, Rio de Janeiro, 5 August 2016, http://direitorio.fgv.br/eventos/international-law-and-the-international-refugee-crisis

Queering (extra-)territoriality Lecture, faculty of Law, Pontificía Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Rio de Janeiro, 28 November 2016 On the ‘let them drown’ policy: Futures for the extraterritorial application of the non-refoulement obligation: the case of rescuing migrants making perilous sea crossings

Public Lecture, Raul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Lund, Sweden, 27 October 2016, http://rwi.lu.se/2016/10/public-lecture-rescuing-migrants-making-perilous-sea-crossings/ Public Lecture, Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Sociales de la Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile, 29 August 2016. Interview here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXKC_LS0TNo&feature=youtu.be&app=desktop

Post-colonial approaches to the extraterritorial application of human rights law

Lecture, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, Brasil, 13 December 2018 (see reported/broadcast remarks for video) Lecture, Faculty of Law, National University of Brasília, Brasília, 17 December 2015

From trusteeship to self-determination and back again: tracing changes in the normative treatment of colonialism, the Mandates and Trusteeship arrangements, occupation and international territorial administration Public Lecture, Department of Law, University of Cyprus, 27 November 2015 Human Rights Beyond Borders

Lecture, Federal University of Roraima, Boa Vista, Brazil, 16 November 2016

Ralph Wilde 31

Lecture, Faculty of Law, MacQuarie University, Sydney, 10 December 2015, http://www.mq.edu.au/about/events/view/law-school-seminar-dr-ralph-wilde/ Public Lecture, Al Quds Human Rights Clinic, اإلنسان لحقوق القدس عيادة, Al-Quds University, Abu Dis, Jerusalem, 18 November 2015, https://www.facebook.com/events/885281378187851/ Lecture, Faculty of Law, National University of Brasilia, Brasilia, 23 July 2015

The legacy of the First World War for international trusteeship

Public Lecture, Manchester International Law Centre, University of Manchester, 7 October 2015, http://events.manchester.ac.uk/event/event:c19-iefvwbrc-u77mjj/the-legacy-of-the-first-world-war-for-international-trusteeship

Dilemmas in Promoting Global Economic Justice through Human Rights Law

International Law Association (ILA) Regional Seminar Series, University of Sheffield Law School, 6 October 2015 Centro Universitário de Brasília (UniCeub), Brasília, 31 July 2015 Faculty of Law, National University of Brasília, Brasília, 30 July 2015 Fundação Getulio Vargas, Faculdade de Direito, Rio de Janeiro, 2 April 2015, http://direitorio.fgv.br/eventos/roda-viva-dilemmas-in-promoting-global-economic-justice-through-human-rights-law Mississippi College School of Law, Jackson, 4 February 2015 Annual Francis Gabor Memorial Lecture, University of Memphis School of Law, Memphis, 2 February 2015 http://onlegalgrounds.law.memphis.edu/wordpress/?p=1923

The extraterritorial application of the non-refoulement obligation in international human rights law

Public lecture, Refugee Law Initiative, Human Rights Consortium, School of Advanced Studies, University of London, Senate House, 5 May 2015

Legal ‘black hole’? The extraterritorial application of international human rights law

Lecture, Escola Paulista de Direito (EPD), São Paulo, Brasil, 1 November 2013 http://direito.epd.edu.br/ Lecture, Faculdade Autonoma de Direito de São Paulo (FADISP), São Paulo, Brasil, 31 October 2013 Lecture, Faculdade Maringá, Maringá, Brasil, 30 November 2013 Lecture, Centro Universitário de Maringá, Maringá, Brasil, 30 November 2013 Lecture, Faculdade de Direito, Universidade de São Paulo (University of Sao Paulo), São Paulo, Brasil, 23 October 2013 Lecture, Universidade Estadual de Londrina (Londrina State University), Londrina, Brasil, 27 September 2013

http://www.uel.br/com/agenciaueldenoticias/index.php?arq=ARQ_not&FWS_Ano_Edicao=1&FWS_N_Edicao=1&FWS_Cod_Categoria=2&FWS_N_Texto=17831 http://www.uel.br/com/agenciaueldenoticias/index.php?arq=ARQ_not&FWS_Ano_Edicao=1&FWS_N_Edicao=1&FWS_Cod_Categoria=2&FWS_N_Texto=17841

Extraterritorial Application of Economic and Social Rights: Problems and Prospects Specialized Course, Academy of European Law, European University Institute, Florence, June 2013 http://www.eui.eu/Documents/DepartmentsCentres/AcademyofEuropeanLaw/SummerSchoolProgrammes/ProgrammeHR2013.pdf

Direitos Humanos além das fronteiras: a aplicação extraterritorial da lei internacional de Direitos Humanos

Public Lecture, Fundação Casa Rui Barbosa, Rio de Janeiro, 26 April 2013 http://www.casaruibarbosa.gov.br/interna.php?ID_S=9&ID_M=2536

Casting light into the ‘legal black hole’ – some political issues at stake

Public Lecture, Fundação Casa Rui Barbosa, Rio de Janeiro, 22 November 2012 http://www.casaruibarbosa.gov.br/interna.php?ID_S=9&ID_M=2463

The Al-Skeini decision of the European Court of Human Rights in 2011 – a landmark?

Lecture, Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law, University of Melbourne Law School, 6 December 2011 Lecture, Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, Cambridge University, Cambridge, 14 October 2011

The application of human rights law to occupations: Human rights imperialism?

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Lecture, CRIO (Centre of Research on International Organizations) Workshop, "Democracy and Human Rights in Occupied Territories", University of Catania Law Faculty, Catania, Sicily, 10 December 2010

The extraterritorial application of human rights law

Series of 10 lectures, Xiamen Academy of International Law, P.R. China, 6-9 July 2010 From trusteeship to self-determination and back again: the role of the Hague Regulations in the evolution of international trusteeship, and the framework of rights and duties of occupying powers

Lecture, University of Catania Law Faculty, Catania, Sicily, 1 April 2009 International organization autonomy as a bar to accountability: peace operations and the Behrami case

Lecture, Sheffield University Law School, Sheffield, 6 February 2009 The accountability deficit in international territorial administration Lecture, Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, Cambridge University, Cambridge, 31 October 2008 The UN’s return to the ‘civilizing mission’

Public lecture, Columbia Law School, New York, 2 April 2008 The House of Lords Al-Skeini decision on the extraterritorial application of human rights: a landmark?

Lecture, State Jurisdiction in a Global Environment: Rethinking Extraterritoriality lecture series, British Institute for International and Comparative Law, London, 18 July 2007

Accountability Issues in International Administration

Keynote address, Accountability for Human Rights Violations by International Organizations international conference, Bruxelles, 16 – 17 March 2007

Occupation and Human Rights Law

Human Rights and Peace-Building in the Middle East Seminar Series 2006: Contemporary Issues in International Humanitarian Law, Sir Joseph Hotung Programme in Law, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, 3 May 2006

Avoiding legal responsibilities? Extraterritorial policy initiatives and the rule of law

The Complex Dynamics of International Migration, Scientific Seminar, University of Montréal, 11 April 2006. Watch the presentation here: <http://www.cerium.ca/article2139.html> Published version listed above under ‘book chapters.’

The extraterritorial application of the Human Rights Act Current Legal Problems lecture, University College London, 24 February 2005 The ‘war on terror’ and international human rights Lecture, Public International Law Speaker Series, Columbia University School of Law, New York, 3 December 2004 The Coalition Provisional Authority and military forces in Iraq: issues of individual and collective responsibility Lecture, British Institute for International and Comparative Law, London, 4 May 2004 The complex role of the legal adviser when international organizations administer territory Lecture, American Society of International Law, Annual Conference, Washington DC, 4 – 7 April 2001 (20) OTHER PRESENTATIONS, INCLUDING CONFERENCE PAPERS AND LAW SCHOOL COLLOQUIA I have also been invited to present at the following universities: American University in Cairo; Bern; Birkbeck; Bristol; Cambridge; Catania; Centro Universitário de Brasília; Centro Universitário de Maringá; Columbia; Copenhagen; Escola Paulista de Direito, São Paulo; European University Institute, Florence; Faculdade Autonoma de Direito de São Paulo; Fordham; Fundação Edison Queiroz, Fortaleza; Fundação Getulio Vargas, Rio de Janeiro; Georgetown; Glasgow; Hebrew University, Jerusalem; Helsinki; Hertie School of Governance, Berlin; Hull; Humbolt, Berlin; Institut

Ralph Wilde 33 de Hautes Etudes Internationales, Genève; Greenwich (UK); Keele; Kiel; King’s College London; Lancaster; Leiden; Limerick; LSE; Loyola Los Angeles; Manchester; Melbourne; Memphis; Mississippi College, Jackson; Montréal; National University Brasília; National University Singapore; Newcastle; New York Law School; New York University; Nottingham; Oxford; Pace; Padua; Portsmouth; Pretoria; Queen Mary University of London; Science Po; Sheffield; SOAS; Soochow University, Taipei; St. Andrews; Sussex; Texas; United Nations University, Tokyo; Universidade de São Paulo; Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota; Universidade Estadual de Londrina; Université libre de Bruxelles; University of California in Los Angeles; Warwick; Wuhan (China); Xiamen (China); and Yeshiva University, New York. I have also been invited to present at events organized by the following organizations/institutes/associations: Academic Council on the United Nations System; American Political Science Association; American Society of International Law (annual conferences and joint conferences with the Netherlands associations of international law and with the Australia/New Zealand Society of International Law); Belgrade Centre for Human Rights; Brasilian Society of International Law; British Institute for International and Comparative Law; Asian Society of International Law; Council of European Studies (US); Count Folke Bernadotte Academy, Sweden; Danish Insitute for Human Rights; European Council on Refugees and Exiles; European Society of International Law; Fundação Casa Rui Barbosa, Rio de Janeiro; Indian Society of International Law; International Association for the Protection of Human Rights in Cyprus; International Association for the Study of Forced Migration; International Law Association (international conferences, American Branch conferences, British Branch conferences, British Branch seminars, South African Branch conference); International Committee for the Red Cross; International Institute for Humanitarian Law, San Remo; International Society for Military Law and the Laws of Law; International Society of Public Law (ICON-S); International Studies Association; Justice (UK); Kosovo Research Institute of Development and European Affairs (RIDEA); Latin American Society of International Law (LASIL-SLADI); Law and Society Association; NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence, Tallinn; Refugee Law Institute (RLI), London; Royal Institute for International Affairs (Chatham House) (UK); Open Society Institute; Russian Association of International Law; Third World Approaches to International Law network; Ukrainian Association of International Law; Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union; University College Dublin; Wilton Park (UK); World International Studies Committee; Xiamen Academy of International Law (PR China). Full details are on the document downloadable from the right-hand sidebar of this page: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/people/dr-ralph-wilde (21) CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION Leadership Chair, Programme Committee, ‘Tower of Babel. International Law in the 21st Century – Coherent or Compartmentalized?,’ International Law Association (British Branch), Annual Conference, London, hosted by UCL and SOAS, 3 - 4 March 2006 Co-organization Member, Program Committee, American Society of International Law Annual Meeting, 2007 Member of the Program Committee (representing the American Society of International Law), 7th Hague Joint Conference on Contemporary Issues of International Law, ‘International Institutional Reform,’ The Hague, 30 June – 2 July 2005, see <http://www.asser.nl/hjc/> Member of the Program Committee, International Law Association (American Branch) Annual Conferences (‘International Law Weekend’), New York: 20 – 22 October 2005; 14 – 16 October 2004; 25 – 27 Oct. 2001 Co-Convenor, ‘Territories under International Administration: A Comparative Study’ Section, Constructing World Orders: 5th Pan-European Conference of the Standing Group on International Relations, The Hague, 10 – 11 September 2004, see <http://www.sgir.org/conference2004/>

Ralph Wilde 34 American Society of International Law (ASIL) International Organizations Interest Group Program Chair for the 2003 Annual Meeting of the ASIL, April 2003 Rapporteurship International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM), Rapporteur for the 7th Conference, South Africa, 2001 (see ‘reports’ in the publications section above) National Reporter for the UK, Topic IV.A: ‘Characteristics of International Administration in Crisis Areas’ (Public International Law), 17th International Congress on Comparative Law, Utrecht, the Netherlands, 16 – 22 July 2006 (22) SERVICE AS A CONFERENCE PANEL CHAIR/CONVENOR/DISCUSSANT Have acted as a chair/convenor/discussant on conference panels at conferences held by the Australian National University; Fundação Casa Rui Barbosa (Rio de Janeiro), King’s College London, Pace University (New York), Soochow University (Taiwan), the University CEU San Pablo in Madrid, University College London (CLP lectures and UCL-ILA international law seminars); those held by the Academic Council on the United Nations System, the American Society of International Law, the European Consortium for Social Research, the European Society of International Law, the Folke Bernadotte Academy of Sweden, the International Standing Group on International Relations, the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration, the International Law Association (international conferences, American Branch International Law Weekend conferences, British Branch Annual conferences, British Branch seminars), the International Studies Association, the UK Human Rights Lawyers Association; and at the ‘United Nations and Global Values’ and Hague Joint conferences in the Hague, and the Critical Perspectives on Global Governance (CPOGG) Conference in Monterrey, Mexico. Full details are available from http://www.laws.ucl.ac.uk/people/ralph-wilde/