September 13, 2020
Symposium: Teaching and Researching International Law – Global Perspectives
Jointly hosted by Afronomicslaw and NUS Centre for International Law
Convenors:
Antony Anghie, James Thuo Gathii, Olabisi D. Akinkugbe and Titilayo Adebola
The NUS Centre for International Law recently released its report on ‘Teaching and Researching International Law in Asia’ (TRILA) on the back of its inaugural conference in 2018. The TRILA Report presents a comprehensive empirical survey of the state of international law teaching and research in Asia. While the Report is focused on Asia, it is intended to contribute to the growing global discussion on teaching and researching international law around the world.
In this online Symposium, Afronomicslaw and NUS Centre for International Law bring together junior and senior scholars and researchers from across the world to critically and comparatively reflect on important issues that we, as academics, face daily, such as teaching approaches and the challenges and opportunities the teaching of international law that technology presents. This rich set of essays also helpfully reflect on ways that we could consider collectively reassessing the international law canon currently centered on the experiences of the Global North. Needless to point out, the essays also take into account the drastic changes that the COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated both in our teaching of international law and in the remaking of institutional priorities.
In particular, this Symposium foregrounds the first-hand account of personal experiences and reflections in what we believe is one of the genuinely cross-continental conversation about the teaching of international law. Many of the essays are experientially grounded thoughtful experiences and interspersed with aspirations about how to be more effective and contextually relevant teachers and scholars of international law.
This collaboration between Afronomicslaw and NUS Centre for International Law therefore reflects the desires of the emerging generation of international law teachers, particularly in Asia, Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America. There are also contribution from scholars and teachers in the Global North. The insights contained in these essays will hopefully inspire and inform the teaching and research of international law so that our discipline can better meet the challenges and opportunities the authors so intentionally and helpfully put together for us.
As joint editors of this Symposium, we thank the authors for writing these excellent essays. We hope the authors remain open to continue this discussion not only through the social media platforms and comment feature of this blog throughout the symposium, but also to possible follow-up projects. We also thank Amiel Ian Valdez and Jing Min Tan of the NUS CIL for their terrific assistance with putting this symposium together.
The Symposium will run for three weeks. Although it was not easy to classify these essays, the editors thought it was necessary to organize them around major themes around which they could then be organized. The categories we have used to sequence the order in which the essays will be published does not therefore mean that the essays do not raise cross-cutting themes. In Week One, the theme of the symposium will be “Country or Regional Studies” on the teaching of international law based on perspectives from Africa, Asia and Latin America.
In Week Two, the focus moves on to the “Institutional Frameworks and Reflections.” The essays in week 2 will focus on critical international law scholarship especially for teachers and researchers from the Global South. It will consider questions such as hosting events and other for a for critical international law scholarship and teaching, but also the challenges and opportunities relating to publication, and the accessibility of materials for scholars and teachers in the Global South.
Finally, in Week Three, the essays will be on the theme “What Needs to be Done”. These contributions analyze concrete ways that we can apply some of the interventions in this symposium.
Contributors:
Week One: Country or Regional Studies
- Sergey Sayapin: The Post-Soviet Central Asia and International Law: Practice, Research and Teaching
- Tran Viet Dung: Teaching and Researching International Law: An Assessment Based on Ho Chi Minh City University of Law’s Experience
- Yin Yin Win: Teaching and Researching International Law in Myanmar
- Balraj K Sidhu: TRILA and India: A Plea for its Restoration
- Nciko Arnold: The Hutians – Decolonising the Teaching of Public International Law in African Law Schools to Address a Real Problem
- Amaya Álvez Marín, Laura Betancur-Restrepo, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Daniel Rivas-Ramírez, and Fabia Veçoso: Rethinking International Law Education in Latin America
- Antarnihita Mishra and Aman Kumar: South Asian University: Towards a ‘South-Asian’ Approach to International Law
- Andreas R Ziegler: Don’t Let International Law Become an Exotic Field Irrelevant for Lawyers…Seven Demands
- George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Some (Short) Reflections on (My) International Law Teaching Experience in Brazil
- Aristyo Darmawan: Indonesia and the Development of the Law of the Sea: Reflections on History, Scholarship, and Teachings
- Tom Kabau: Theoretical Perspectives to the Teaching and Researching of International Law in Africa
Week Two: Institutional Frameworks and Reflections
- Md. Rizwanul Islam: Teaching and Researching International Law by Resource-Constrained Academics
- Vellah Kedogo Kigwiru: To Blog or not to Blog? Technology, Blogging from a Pedagogical Consideration and Teaching International Economic Law: Taking Blogging Seriously from the Lens of AfronomicsLaw Blog
- Eugenio Gomez-Chico: Teaching and Learning From Where You Stand: a Reflection
- Danushka S. Medawatte: Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Teaching International Law in Sri Lanka
- Afshin Akhtar-Khavari: Universities and the Teaching-Research Nexus in (International) Law Faculties
- S Pandiaraj: Teaching and Researching International Law at Private Law Schools: A Personal Reflection
- Kinnari Bhatt: Where Are All the T-Shaped International Lawyers?
- Amritha V Shenoy: Teaching PIL in Nepal: A Personal Experience
- Rohini Sen: Teaching International Law in Asia: The Predicated Pedagogue
- Miguel Rábago Dorbecker: Reproduction of the Hierarchy and the Training of Internationalist Lawyers: an Auto-ethnography of a Latin American Professor
- Mohammad Shahabuddin: Teaching and Researching International Law: Some Personal Reflections Via Bangladesh and the UK
Week Three: What Needs to be Done
- Seokwoo Lee: Asian State Practice of Domestic Implementation of International Law (ASP-DIIL)
- Alexandr Svetlicinii: Teaching “BRICS Law”: Application of Team Teaching and Learning Technologies
- Koesrianti: Teaching International Law: Indonesian Practical Experience
- Arman Anwar: Managing Legal Issues at Local Level to be Appealing for Students to Learn International Law
- Pawat Satayanurug: Adaptability with Inclusivity: Teaching International Law during the Pandemic
- Irawati Handayani: Problem-Based Learning as an Alternative Approach for Teaching International Law
- Gunjan Chawla: TRILA in the Shadow of ‘National Security’: Towards Developing TWAIL Approaches to the International Law of Cyberspace
- Florence Shako: Teaching and Researching International Law – a Kenyan Perspective
- Mohsen Al Attar: “I Can’t Breathe”: Confronting the Racism of International Law