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The ICJ and Multi-Forum Litigation Strategy

King's Building, Strand Campus, London

28JanThe book and the event details

The ICJ and Multi-Forum Litigation Strategy

If a court’s judgments are merely hortatory, can it still be classified as a legal dispute settlement body? Or a court that has lost its legitimacy in the eyes of its users? Does this render the law upon which this court relies, lesser law? In international law such questions are conspicuously pertinent today. As multilateralism is falling apart, humanity has put -not all, but at least- some of its hopes on international courts to resolve contemporary disputes. And the International Court of Justice -a pivotal judicial institution in the international legal order- is increasingly instrumentalized as part of multi-forum litigation strategies when it deals with the main political issues of the day. Voulgaris’ book “The ICJ and Multi-forum litigation strategy” sheds light to the questions posed above. In particular, the book draws inferences from legal and political sciences to assess ICJ authority when crises make their way to it as part of such a litigation strategy.

Chair

Dr Rosana Garciandia, King's College London

Rosana Garciandia is Co-Director of the Centre for International Governance and Dispute Resolution (CIGAD) and Senior Lecturer in Public International Law at The Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London. She conducts research on the international law response to human rights abuses, including torture, racial discrimination, labour exploitation and all contemporary forms of slavery, as well as on international dispute settlement mechanisms. She is also a Research Leader on human and labour rights at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, and she is part of the recently launched Leverhulme Centre for Research on Slavery in Law, led by King’s College London and the Nottingham Rights Lab.

Rosana has held positions in various international organisations. She served as Secretary General of the European Law Institute in Vienna. She has also worked at the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and at the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights. She has developed research for the UN Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Slavery and for the European Parliament Subcommittee on Human Rights (EP DROI Subcommittee).

Speaker

Professor Nikolaos Voulgaris, King's College London

Professor Nikolaos Voulgaris is a Fellow for the Centre for International Governance and Dispute Resolution (CIGAD) at The Dickson Poon School of Law.

Nikolaos Voulgaris is a professor of international law at the European Law & Governance School and an adjunct professor at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. Specialised in general public international law, his interests include the law of international responsibility, the sources and subjects of international law and international dispute resolution. His latest research explores the limits of international courts as dispute resolution mechanisms. His monograph entitled The ICJ and Multi-forum Litigation Strategy was published with Brill in 2025.

He studied law in Athens (LLB & LLM, Athens University) and London (LLM & PhD, KCL). He has taught both postgraduate and undergraduate courses at KCL and Athens. He conducted research for the Freedom Rights Project and Prof. Guglielmo Verdirame. Also, he has worked as a lawyer at the law office of Prof. Stavros Tsakyrakis, for the European Court of Human Rights and the Greek National Committee for Human Rights. He is the author of Allocating International Responsibility between International Organizations and Member States (Hart, 2019) a monograph based on his doctoral dissertation.

Discussants

Professor Christian Tams, King's College London

Dr Maria Varaki, King's College London

Dr Maria Varaki is a lecturer in international law at the Department of War Studies at King's College London. Before moving to London she held research positions with the Erik Castren Institute of International Law and Human Rights in Helsinki and the Law Faculty of Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She was also an Assistant Professor in International Law at Kadir Has University in Istanbul. Currently she is a Research Associate in 3 Generations of Digital Human Rights, ERC project, 2023-2028, Hebrew University, Faculty of Law.

Join us after for a drinks reception and some nibbles.

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At this event

Rosana Garciandia

Co-Director of the Centre for International Governance and Dispute Resolution


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