Search for: "Ashley Deeks" Results 121 - 140 of 260
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3 Jun 2017, 4:17 am by Matthew Kahn
Ashley Deeks and Russell Spivak explained the D.C. [read post]
21 Aug 2020, 12:28 pm by Tia Sewell
Ashley Deeks discussed how “law tech,” or AI tools designed to support legal work, might play out in the international law setting. [read post]
7 Oct 2017, 6:19 am by Garrett Hinck
Matthew Kahn posted the Lawfare Podcast, featuring audio from a Hoover Institution event at which Oona Hathaway and Scott Shapiro discussed their new book The Internationalists with Jack Goldsmith: Ashley Deeks discussed Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions and non-state armed groups for the multi-blog series on the Fifth Annual Transatlantic Workshop on International Law and Armed Conflict. [read post]
9 Apr 2016, 7:51 am by Alex R. McQuade
Ashley Deeks responded to his speech, highlighting Egan’s discussion of “imminence. [read post]
12 Jan 2016, 3:27 pm by Robert Chesney
Location: Sheffield-Massey Room (Townes Hall 2.111), UT School of Law 9:00am - 9:30am         Welcome and breakfast: Introduction by Judge James Baker 9:30am - 10:30am       SESSION 1: Cyber in the Intelligence/Surveillance Context Bill Banks (Syracuse) Jen Daskal (American) 10:45am - 11:45am     SESSION 2: Cyber in the Criminal Law Context Paul Ohm (Georgetown) Jennifer Granick (Stanford) Richard Downing (Justice Department) Sean Farrell (FBI) 11:45am -… [read post]
1 Jun 2019, 8:52 pm by Hadley Baker
Ashley Deeks analyzed the way tech companies have recently made decisions in order to enforce international law against states to restrict the availability of their products in states that might use them in illegal ways. [read post]
3 Dec 2020, 1:01 pm by Anna Salvatore
Jack Goldsmith shared the Winter 2020 Supplement for his foreign relations law casebook, co-written by Curtis Bradley and Ashley Deeks. [read post]
8 Apr 2017, 8:24 am by Kenneth Anderson
., Ashley Deeks on "unwilling or unable";  Bobby Chesney, Rebecca Ingber, and many other Lawfare contributors on whether the original AUMF still carries legal force for contemporary operations—and, for that matter, my 2015 book with Benjamin Wittes, Speaking the Law). [read post]
5 Oct 2017, 12:48 pm by Vanessa Sauter
Ashley Deeks discussed Common Article 3 and non-state armed groups for the multi-blog series on the Fifth Annual Transatlantic Workshop on International Law and Armed Conflict. [read post]
7 Mar 2016, 1:45 pm by Robert Chesney
 I say that because, just eight months ago, a similar set of airstrikes conducted by the United States were defended on the ground that AMISOM forces, alone, were endangered (see Ashley Deeks, here, and me here). [read post]
29 Apr 2015, 7:00 pm by The Book Review Editor
The detention question was raised a while back on Lawfare, in a 2013 post by Ashley Deeks regarding  UN “standard operating procedures to govern detentions that arise in the course of UN operations. [read post]
12 Apr 2016, 12:46 pm by Douglas Cantwell
As Ashley Deeks noted, states increasingly resort to multi-part tests (MPTs) when justifying uses of force that don’t fall within the strict confines of the UN Charter. [read post]
12 Jan 2012, 3:30 pm by Kevin Jon Heller
”  Blank offers precisely one citation for the “unwilling or unable” test, and that citation will not surprise you: Ashley Deeks’ forthcoming article in the Virginia Journal of International Law. [read post]
16 Aug 2014, 7:00 am by Tara Hofbauer
Ashley Deeks considered Maliki’s constitutional argument. [read post]
16 Sep 2011, 11:42 pm by Kevin Jon Heller
  (Ashley Deeks at least cites a couple of law reviews in defense of it, albeit one from 1958, in addition to — unsurprisingly — statements by American officials.) [read post]
3 Feb 2014, 10:11 am by Kenneth Anderson
”  The Obama administration (as Benjamin Wittes and I explain in this book chapter) holds to the US government’s traditional view that a lawful target does not cease being a lawful target under the laws of war in virtue of crossing a border – the restrictions in any particular circumstance, if any, arise under jus ad bellum considerations of the rights of neutral states, subject to the “unable or unwilling” test, articulated by Ashley Deeks in her… [read post]
9 Apr 2016, 9:53 am by Rita Siemion, Heather Brandon
Marty Lederman provided a broad summary over at Just Security and here at Lawfare Jack Goldsmith, Ashley Deeks, and Daniel Bethlehem have been discussing Egan’s treatment of imminence under the jus ad bellum. [read post]
3 Aug 2018, 8:10 am by Hilary Hurd
However, as Ashley Deeks points out, the manual for U.S. attorneys includes certain provisions designed to protect the press from the full enforcement of Section 641. [read post]
1 Mar 2017, 6:00 am by Zachary Burdette
Ashley Deeks has explored the dynamics of how this interstate intelligence cooperation constrains the U.S. intelligence community, referring to these limitations as “peer constraints. [read post]