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X-WR-CALNAME:Reiss Center on Law and Security
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.lawandsecurity.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Reiss Center on Law and Security
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191031T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191031T133000
DTSTAMP:20260429T185635
CREATED:20191020T181959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200807T051513Z
UID:5621-1572523200-1572528600@www.lawandsecurity.org
SUMMARY:What's Happening in Syria?  Anatomy of a Crisis
DESCRIPTION:\n\n\n \n\n		\n			#gallery-1 {\n				margin: auto;\n			}\n			#gallery-1 .gallery-item {\n				float: left;\n				margin-top: 10px;\n				text-align: center;\n				width: 33%;\n			}\n			#gallery-1 img {\n				border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;\n			}\n			#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {\n				margin-left: 0;\n			}\n			/* see gallery_shortcode() in wp-includes/media.php */\n		\n		\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n		\n\nThe Reiss Center on Law and Security hosted a discussion on the crisis unfolding in Syria following the recent withdrawal of US forces\, and the subsequent incursions by Turkish and Turkish-backed forces against the Kurds. The withdrawal has precipitated a chaotic turn in the long-raging\, complex conflict in Syria and triggered a humanitarian emergency. It may have significant repercussions for the United States’ success in the fight against ISIS. And it raises a host of issues surrounding the use of force\, implications for NATO and criminal accountability under the laws of war. \nPanelists addressed the national security\, legal and geopolitical dimensions of recent events\, unpacking both the foreign policy and international law issues at play. \nOctober 31\, 2019\n12:00-1:30 p.m. \nD’Agostino Hall\n108 W. 3rd Street\nNew York\, NY \n1.5 credits of CLE in the Areas of Professional Practice category were available. This event was appropriate for both newly admitted and experienced attorneys. \nThis event was free of charge. \nFeaturing\nAnne Barnard\, former Beirut Bureau Chief\, New York Times\nJon Finer\, former Director of Policy Planning at the U.S. Department of State and Middle East Advisor to the Vice President\nClaus Kress\, Professor and Director\, Institute of International Peace and Security Law\, University of Cologne \nModerated by\nRyan Goodman\, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Professor of Law\, NYU School of Law; Faculty Director\, Reiss Center on Law and Security; Founding Co-Editor-in-Chief\, Just Security \nSpeaker Bios\nAnne Barnard\nAnne Barnard led coverage of the Syria war for six years at the New York Times\, reporting from across the Middle East as Beirut bureau chief. Since the September 11 attacks\, she has chronicled the human and strategic impact of U.S. war policies on frontline areas including Iraq\, Syria\, Gaza\, Afghanistan\, Pakistan\, Iran\, Lebanon\, Barnard has worked in the Middle East on and off since 2003\, beginning as bureau chief for the Boston Globe in Baghdad\, where she documented the American invasion and occupation of Iraq and its impact across the region. This year she began covering climate change and environmental issues\, focusing on their impact on New York City\, after completing the Edward R. Murrow Press Fellowship at the Council on Foreign Relations. \nBarnard has won several journalism prizes\, including the Columbia Journalism School’s Meyer Berger Award for a series on the impact of the 2010 earthquake on New York’s Haitian diaspora. She has been awarded a Pew fellowship in international journalism at the Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies and the Ochberg fellowship from the Columbia Journalism School’s Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. \nShe graduated cum laude from Yale University in 1992. \nJon Finer \nJon Finer is a Non-Resident Advisor at the Reiss Center on Law and Security at NYU School of Law. Previously\, he was the chief of staff and director of policy planning at the U.S. Department of State\, serving as Secretary John Kerry’s principal advisor and helping lead the Obama Administration’s key diplomatic initiatives\, including the Iran nuclear negotiations and the Paris climate accord. Finer served in the White House during the first term of the Obama Administration\, starting as a White House Fellow in the Office of the Chief of Staff and also working as Vice President Biden’s Middle East advisor and foreign policy speech writer\, as well as on the National Security Council Staff. \nBefore his time in government\, Finer reported from more than a dozen countries as a foreign and national correspondent for the Washington Post\, including covering the invasion of Iraq while embedded with the U.S. Marines and spending eighteen months in Baghdad during the descent into civil war.  He also covered conflicts in Georgia\, Lebanon\, and Gaza. Finer’s essays and opinion writing have been published in the Atlantic\, the Boston Globe\, the Christian Science Monitor\, Foreign Affairs\, Foreign Policy\, the Los Angeles Times\, the New Yorker\, the New York Times\, Politico\, and the Washington Post. He began his career at the Far Eastern Economic Review\, a news and business magazine in Hong Kong. \nFiner has a law degree from Yale\, an M.Phil in International Relations from Oxford\, where he was a Rhodes Scholar\, and an undergraduate degree from Harvard. He is the co-founder and chair of the Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project\, and serves on the board of the Truman National Security Project\, and the advisory boards of Diplomacy Works and Foreign Policy for America. He currently oversees the political risk and public policy practice at Warburg Pincus\, LLC\, a global investment firm. \nClaus Kress\nClaus Kress is a Professor of International Law and Criminal Law. He holds the Chair for German and International Criminal Law and he is the Director of the Institute of International Peace and Security Law at the University of Cologne. His prior practice was in the German Federal Ministry of Justice on matters of criminal law and international law. In addition to his scholarly work\, comprising more than 150 publications on the law on the use of force\, the law of armed conflicts and international criminal law\, he has been a member of Germany’s delegations in the negotiations regarding the International Criminal Court since 1998. He is a Life Member of Clare Hall College at the University of Cambridge\, a Member of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Northrhine-Westfalia\, and the recipient of the 2014 M.C. Bassiouni Justice Award as well as of honorary doctorates from the State University Tbilisi and the University of Huánuco. He was a Guest Professor at Columbia Law School\, Kyoto Law School\, Melbourne Law School and at the European University Institute. \nRyan Goodman (Moderator)\nRyan Goodman is the Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. He served as special counsel to the general counsel of the Department of Defense (2015-16). In addition to his posts at NYU School of Law\, Goodman is an associated member of the Department of Sociology and an affiliated member of the Department of Politics at NYU. Before joining the Law School\, he was the Rita E. Hauser Professor of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law and director of the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School. Goodman has published articles in leading law reviews and has also co-authored several books\, including Socializing States: Promoting Human Rights Through International Law with Derek Jinks (2013) (winner of top annual book award by the American Society of International Law). His work makes significant contributions to the law of armed conflict\, human rights law\, and U.S. national security law. The U.S. Supreme Court relied on Goodman’s amicus briefs in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld when it overturned the government’s system of military commissions\, and in Lawrence v. Texas\, when it overturned an anti-sodomy statute. Goodman received his BA in government and philosophy from the University of Texas at Austin. He earned his JD from Yale Law School and a PhD in sociology from Yale University. He is a member of the board of editors of the American Journal of International Law\, a member of the U.S. Department of State’s Advisory Committee on International Law\, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is also the founding co-editor-in-chief of the national security online forum\, Just Security. \n  \nCLE Reading Materials\n  \n4 Big Questions About Syria’s Future\nAnne Barnard\, Anjali Singhvi\, Sarah Almukhtar\, Allison McCann and Jin Wu\nNew York Times \nTurkey’s (Latest) Invasion of Syria: Aggression\, Proportionality\, and Legal Consequences for NATO and Third-Party States\nAdil Ahmad Haque\nJust Security \nA Collective Failure to Prevent Turkey’s Operation ‘Peace Spring’ and NATO’s Silence on International Law\nClaus Kress\nEJIL: Talk! \nCan Turkey be Expelled from NATO? It’s Legally Possible\, Whether or Not Politically Prudent\nAurel Sari\nJust Security \nTurkey’s Actions Trigger All States’ Obligations to Prosecute War Crimes by Turkish Forces\nBeth Van Schaack and Julia Brooks\nJust Security \n
URL:https://www.lawandsecurity.org/calendar/syria-crisis/
LOCATION:Faculty Club\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.lawandsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/RCLS-Syria-Panel-E-sign-10.31.19-preview-1-e1571713889503.jpg
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