# International Conflict and War
65 Va. J. Int’l L. Online 1 (2024) ♦ Online
Serving Sovereigns: In Republic of Sudan v. Harrison, the Supreme Court Maintained the Inviolability of Foreign Embassies Against Service of Process Despite the FSIA Anti-Terrorism Exception’s Remedial Goals
What has Congress done—and not done—to assist the victims of state-sponsored terrorism in winning and collecting damages judgments against sponsors of international terrorism?
JEFFREY A. VAN DETTA
65 Va. J. Int’l L. Online 1 (2024) ♦ Online
Law Breaking, Law Making, and International Law: Palestine, Israel, and the Foundations of International Law
This Essay argues that the Israel-Palestine conflict’s prominent place in global consciousness reflects deep disagreement on the nature of post-World War II international law and the relationship between power, sovereignty, and legitimacy in that order…
MOHAMMAD FADEL
64 Va. J. Int’l L. Online 1 (2023) ♦ Online
Frameworks for Accountability: How Domestic Tort Law Can Inform the Development of International Law of State Responsibility in Armed Conflicts
The development of international law of state responsibility in warfare thus far has either implicitly relied on tort law and theory as a means of comprehending elements of liability, or explicitly suggested that reparations in international…
HAIM ABRAHAM
64 Va. J. Int’l L. 69 (2023) ♦ Article
Regulating the Foreign-Fighter Phenomenon
The transnational mobilization of foreign fighters is a centuries-old phenomenon that threatens international security. The phenomenon challenges States’ sovereign monopoly on the use of force under international law. It augments the capabilities of parties…
BENJAMIN R. FARLEY
63 Va. J. Int’l L. 319 (2023) ♦ Article
Implementing War Torts
Under international law, no entity is accountable for lawful acts in war that cause harm, and accountability mechanisms for unlawful acts (like war crimes) rarely create a right to compensation for individual victims. Accordingly, states now regularly…
REBECCA CROOTOF
62 Va. J. Int’l L. 64 (2021) ♦ Article
Wars of Conquest in the Twenty-First Century and the Lessons of History ‒ Crimea, Panama, and John Bassett Moore
This Article uses history to explore how prominent international lawyers explain seemingly transgressive state behavior. It begins with the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014. This seizure of another state’s territory by force of arms seems to violate everything that…
PAUL B. STEPHAN
61 Va. J. Int’l L. 272 (2021) ♦ Article
Are All Soldiers Created Equal? – On the Equal Application of the Law to Enhanced Soldiers
Enhanced soldiers (with biochemical, cybernetic or prosthetic enhancements) will soon become an integral part of armed conflicts. The deployment of soldiers with superior battlefield abilities raises important legal questions that are only now emerging as…
YAHLI SHERESHEVSKY
58 Va. J. Int’l L. 369 (2019) ♦ Essay
Armed Conflict at the Threshold?
Seventeen years into the United States’ engagement in what America has controversially understood as a global, non-international armed conflict against a shifting set of terrorist groups, a growing array of scholars has called for a reassessment of the significance of…
DEBORAH PEARLSTEIN
57 Va. J. Int’l L. 414 (2018) ♦ Note
Otherwise Occupied: The Legal Status of the Gaza Strip 50 Years after the Six-Day War
Fifty years after Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories began, and a dozen years after its disengagement from Gaza, the legal status of the Gaza Strip has been regarded as settled. Although no single conclusion has achieved consensus, two distinct camps have…
ROI BACHMUTSKY
64 Va. J. Int’l L. 173 (2023) ♦ Essay
Taiwan, War Powers, and Constitutional Crisis
Many policy assessments assume that the president would have the domestic legal authority necessary to respond with immediate military force in the event that China were to pursue an unexpected attack on Taiwan. But this view is in some tension with history…
SCOTT R. ANDERSON
63 Va. Int’l L. 251 (2023) ♦ Note
The Case for Reforming JASTA
As the Supreme Court all but closed the door on Alien Tort Statute litigants alleging injuries from terror attacks, Congress opened a window by passing the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act (JASTA) in 2016. A review of 300 complaints reveals that…
JACK V. HOOVER
62 Va. J. Int’l L. 204 (2021) ♦ Note
Disentangling Conflict and Minerals: How NGOs and Lawmakers Ought to Rebrand Their Flawed Narrative of Eastern Congo
The “conflict minerals” provision of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 requires publicly traded companies in the United States to disclose whether certain minerals used in their products have been sourced from mines…
MAX CHAFFETZ
60 Va. J. Int’l L. 51 (2019) ♦ Article
Inventing the War Crime: An Internal Theory
This Article offers a novel account of how and why the war crime arose as a legal concept in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The reason was not new horrors and atrocities, though to be sure there were all too many of those. Nor was the war crime born of…
JESSICA LAIRD & JOHN FABIAN WITT
58 Va. J. Int’l L. 97 (2018) ♦ Article
Analogies in Detentions: Distorting the Balance Between Military Necessity and Humanity
Seventeen years after the 9/11 attacks, the United States’ detention authority in the conflict against Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and associated forces is at its zenith. Congress and the federal courts have endorsed the Executive’s position that the 2001 Authorization for Use of…
CHARLES PENDLETON TRUMBULL IV