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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210222T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210222T143000
DTSTAMP:20260423T113623
CREATED:20210127T055105Z
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UID:98710-1613998800-1614004200@www.fedbar.org
SUMMARY:Webinar: Keeping Jurisdictional Boundaries Straight at the ICJ\, the UNCITRAL\, the ICC\, and the PCA:  An Introduction
DESCRIPTION:This quarterly topical webinar program will engage experts working in and around the International Courts and Tribunals about jurisdictional boundaries surrounding the International Court of Justice (ICJ)\, the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL)\, the International Criminal Court (ICC)\, and the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA).  This program is aimed at young legal professionals and will highlight selected cases\, legal community initiatives\, and employment opportunities at these international bodies ensuring that program participants develop a useful set of skills that will make them competitive in the hiring process\, and\, once hired\, that they have the right “toolbelt” to ensure success in their international court roles. \n\nRegistration\nRegistration for this event is now closed. Attendees will receive a calendar invitation for the webinar with streaming information. \nRegistration Fees \n\nFBA Members – $0\nNonmembers – $75\n\n\nMeet the Presenters\nHon. Mimi Tsankov\, Board of Director\, Federal Bar Association (Introduction) \nMimi Tsankov is an Immigration Judge at the New York Federal Plaza Immigration Court.  In the past 15 years presiding at Immigration Courts in New York\, Colorado\, and California\, she has held a variety of national leadership roles including Pro Bono Liaison Judge\, contributing editor to the Immigration Judge Benchbook\, Attorney Discipline Adjudicator\, Chair\, Immigration Court – Board of Immigration Appeals Precedent Committee\, Mentor Judge\, and Juvenile Docket Best Practices Committee Chair.  She is currently active in a variety of roles in the National Association of Immigration Judges (NAIJ)\, including Eastern Regional Vice President\, and chairing committees addressing gender equality issues and vulnerable populations cases.  In her personal capacity\, she has been elected to the Federal Bar Association (FBA) Board of Directors\, and serves as Immediate Past President of the FBA Southern District of New York (SDNY) Chapter.  She is a prior Chair of the FBA national International Law Section. Presently she serves on the Board of the Judicial Division and the Diversity and Inclusion Committee.  In Fall 2020\, she chaired a national law student three-part webinar program entitled\, Racial Equality and the SDGs: A Certificate Training Program for Law Students.  This program was accessible to all law students\, nationwide. Judge Tsankov is co-chair of the National Association of Women Judges (NAWJ) Immigration Law Committee\, and is Vice President of Publications.  At the American Bar Association (ABA)\, she is currently serving on a presidential appointment to the Commission on Immigration\, and is a member of the Executive Board of the Judicial Division\, National Conference of Administrative Law Judiciary.   Judge Tsankov serves as an adjunct faculty member at the Fordham Law School in New York.  She publishes regularly and in the past few months has published articles in the California Western Law Review\, the International Bar Association Immigration Law Journal\, and the ABA Human Rights Magazine. She speaks regularly before members of the immigration law community at international\, national\, and regional conferences. \nRachel V. Rose (Moderator) \nMs. Rose has a unique background. Throughout her career\, she has accumulated knowledge in a multitude of fields\, with an emphasis on various facets of healthcare. Her experiences include: \n\nworking on Wall Street and at one of the “Big Four” consulting firms;\nproducing for the Chairman of the Reform and Oversight Committee on Capitol Hill;\ninterning at the Department of Health and Human Services;\ncompiling policy papers at the Royal College of Nursing in London;\nconsultative work as a top performing representative for the pharmaceutical and medical device industry; ​\nclerking for the Honorable Linda R. Allan (6th Judicial Circuit\, FL).\n\nPrior to opening her law firm\, she was Director of Business Development and Assistant General Counsel for a healthcare advisory company. \nShe is extensively published and presents on a variety of healthcare\, False Claims Act\, Dodd-Frank\, and securities law topics including: cybersecurity\, qui tam\, physician reimbursement\, ICD-10\, access to care\, anti-kickback and Stark laws\, U.S. Supreme Court cases impacting the medical device industry\, international comparative healthcare laws\, and the HIPAA/the HITECH Act. \nPresently\, she is the chair of the Federal Bar Association’s Government Relations Committee. Ms. Rose has co-authored The American Bar Association’s books –  The ABCs of ACOs and What Are International HIPAA Considerations?\, as well as being a co-editor of American Health Lawyers Association’s Enterprise Risk Management Handbook (2nd Edition). Ms. Rose is also an Affiliated Member of the Baylor College of Medicine’s Center for Health Policy and Medical Ethics\, where she teaches bioethics and is on the University of Houston Law School’s Healthcare Law Advisory Board. \nLinda Strite Murnane\, “Of Counsel”\, Dave Cusack Law Firm\, LLC; Retired Chief Circuit Military Judge (European and Eastern Circuits); Colonel\, USAF\, Ret. \nColonel Linda Strite Murnane (U.S. Air Force\, Retired) is “Of Counsel” with the Dave Cusack Law Firm\, LLC.  She  served as the Chief\, Court Management Services Section for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon Leidschendam\, The Netherlands and as the Chief\, Court Management at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia\, in The Hague\, The Netherlands. She served two years as the Acting Senior Legal Officer for Trial Chamber III at the Yugoslavia Tribunal.  As the Chief Court Management Services Section at the Lebanon and Yugoslavia Tribunals\, she was responsible for the electronic filing and evidence systems\, and the support teams comprised of lawyers and other legal support staff proving in court services which operated in English\, French and Arabic or Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian. \nWhile at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon she was also designated as the Independent Commissioner and\, upon assignment\, investigated allegations of misconduct involving defence (European spelling convention) counsel and legal representatives of victims who appear before the Tribunal. While at the Yugoslavia Tribunal\, she led teams totaling about 40 staff involved in the daily operation of the courtrooms in which the trials of alleged war criminals were being conducted under the mandate of the United Nations Security Council.  She also was responsible for leading a team responsible for implementing three components of the European Union-funded War Crimes Justice Project\, providing training to court professionals and others in the Balkans\, transcribing verbatim local language transcripts and providing translation of the ICTY’s Appeals Chamber Case Law Research Tool in Balkan languages.  In 2011\, she also spent three months as the Acting Head of Chambers for the Tribunal and in 2011 – 2012 she spent four and one-half months as the Acting Deputy Registrar for the Tribunal.  While a Senior Legal Officer at the Yugoslavia Tribunal\, Colonel Murnane was responsible for preparation of orders\, decisions\, judgments and support for the international judiciary.  Colonel Murnane specifically had responsibility for the cases of Milutinovic\, et al. (six accused charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Kosovo)\, Prlic\, et al. (six accused charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity involving the Herceg-Bosna leadership)\, Vojislav Seselj\, and Vlastimir Djordjevic.  She was also responsible in the pre-trial phase for the cases of Rasim Delic\, Stanisic and Simatovic\, Momcilo Perisic\, Lukic and Lukic\, and Radovan Karadzic. While at the Yugoslavia Tribunal Colonel Murnane also served for periods as the Chair of the Disciplinary Panel\, and legal officer for the Disciplinary Board. \nMs. Murnane served as the Judicial Bailiff for The Honorable Anne Taylor at the Franklin County\, Ohio\, Municipal Court from 2013 – 2014.  She also served as a legal researcher with Western Governors University\, and as a solutions consultant for Lexis Nexis during her professional career. \nColonel Murnane served as the Senior International Attorney for the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies from November 2008 until her return to the ICTY in August 2009. Based in Newport\, Rhode Island\, the Institute is the Department of Defense’s lead agency providing seminars and programs to military personnel and civilian government officials throughout the world dealing with the legal complications of the strategic\, operational\, and tactical decisions faced by military personnel and civilian professionals as they work to accomplish their missions.  She served as the Executive Director for the Kentucky Commission on Human Rights in the United States\, a gubernatorial executive cabinet commission\, from February 2005 until July 2007.  Prior to that\, she served for nearly 30 years on active duty with the United States Air Force.  In her Air Force career\, Colonel Murnane served in a variety of positions\, including ten years as a chief circuit military judge\, or military judge.  She was the Chief Circuit Judge for Europe and the Eastern Judicial Circuit\, Bolling AFB\, Washington\, D.C.  She presided at the first criminal trials for the U.S. Air Force during Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom in the war zone\, deploying five times in support of those operations between 2001 and 2003. \nColonel Murnane served as the Chief\, International\, Operations and Civil Law while assigned at U.S. Forces Japan/Fifth Air Force from 1988 – 1991.  She was the Deputy Staff Judge Advocate at Ramstein Air Base\, Germany\, from 1991 – 1993\, and the Staff Judge Advocate at Bitburg Air Base\, Germany from 1993 – 1994.  In each of these positions\, she served as an advisor to commanders making decisions employing Rules of Engagement\, in the European and Pacific Theaters for U.S. and Joint Forces. \nColonel Murnane has participated in training programs as an adjunct faculty member for the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies\, training judges\, lawyers and civilian leaders in Liberia\, Rwanda\, Zambia\, Argentina\, Latvia\, and Papua New Guinea\, on a wide range of legal topics. \nColonel Murnane began her career as an Airman Basic\, the lowest enlisted grade in the U.S. Air Force\, and retired as a colonel in 2004.  Her military decorations include the Legion of Merit\, and the Meritorious Service Medal with bronze and silver oak leaf cluster. \nColonel Murnane is the Chair of the U.S. Chapter of the Pan American Judges on Social Justice and Franciscan Doctrine.  She is a Past Chair of the American Bar Association’s (ABA) Judicial Division\, and a past Chair of the National Conference of Specialized Jurisdiction Court Judges (NCSCJ) for the Judicial Division\, and currently serves as the Budget Officer for the ABA Judicial Division and as the ABA House of Delegates Representative for the NCSCJ.  She currently serves on the ABA Section of International Law Executive Council and serves as co-chair of the ABA International Law Section’s International Human Rights Committee.  She is a past Chair and former member of the ABA’s Standing Committee on Armed Forces Law\, and a past Co-Chair and current Senior Advisor to the ABA Section of International Law’s U.S. Lawyers Practicing Abroad Committee.  She is a member of the ABA’s GP Solo and Small Firm Division\, Government and Public Sector Lawyers Division\, Criminal Law Section\, and State and Local Government Section.  She is also a member of the American Judges Association\, the International Association of Women Judges\, the National Association of Women Judges\, and the Federal Bar Association.  She is a co-chair of the Ohio State Bar Association’s Military and Veterans Affairs Committee. \nShe is admitted to the practice of law before the U.S. Supreme Court\, the Ohio and Kentucky Supreme Courts\, the Federal and Sixth Circuit Courts of Appeals\, the U.S. Court of International Trade\, the U.S\,. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio\,  the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces\, and the Army and Air Force Courts of Criminal Appeals.   In 2017 she received the ABA International Law Section’s Mayre Rasmussen Award for advancing opportunities for women in the field of international law.  In August 2008\, she received the Margaret Brent Women of Achievement Award\, one of the most prestigious awards presented by the American Bar Association\, and in 2003\, she received the Ohio State Bar Association’s Nettie Cronise Lutes Award for opening doors for women and girls in the field of law. \nShe attended Loyola University New Orleans Night Law Program\, and transferred to the regular law study program when she was selected for the United States Air Force’s Funded Legal Education Program in 1977.  She was awarded the American Jurisprudence Award for Academic Excellence in Constitution Law while at Loyola.  She transferred to the University of Cincinnati College of Law in the summer of 1978\, and was awarded her J.D. degree from the University of Cincinnati\, completing her law studies in December 1980. \nColonel Murnane is married to Lieutenant Colonel Kevin Murnane\, U.S. Air Force\, Retired\, who\, at the time of his retirement was the Deputy Chief of Strategic Plans for Personnel for the United States Air Force\, The Pentagon.  They have two children\, Christina Veillon and Rachel Lyn Veillon Manuel\, both born while Colonel Murnane was attending law school\, and three grandchildren. \n\nCancellation Policy: No refunds will be made for notices of cancellation received after the close of business on February 19\, 2020. No-shows will be billed. Substitutions may be made up to one business day prior to the event except as the Association otherwise agrees in writing. Please contact Ariel White at awhite@fedbar.org with cancellation and/or substitution requests. \nEmail Communication Policy: By registering for this event\, you agree to receive email communications from the Federal Bar Association and affiliated sponsors of the program concerning event details\, Continuing Legal Education certification\, programming changes\, upcoming events\, surveys\, and post-event communications. \nRecording Disclaimer: By registering for an FBA webinar\, you agree to the recording of audio and visual content presented during the live event and consent to subsequent use of the recording by the FBA. You agree that the recording is the sole property of the FBA and that the recording may be used by the FBA in any manner in its sole and absolute discretion. This recording may include questions and poll responses provided by you during the live event. If you do not consent to the recording and the FBA’s use of the same\, do not register for the event. \nFinancial Assistance: Program registrants (both FBA members and nonmembers) who are unable to afford the registration fee may receive a 50% discount on the member rate. Qualifying attorneys include those who are unemployed or actively seeking employment. A formal letter requesting the discount must be emailed to meetings@fedbar.org. That letter needs to state the reason for the attorney’s interest in the course or activity\, as well as proof of income or an explanation of the financial hardship\, and it must be signed by the requesting lawyer. \nIf you have any questions regarding this program\, please contact Ariel White\, Program Coordinator.
URL:https://www.fedbar.org/event/keeping-jurisdictional-boundaries-straight-at-the-icj-the-uncitral-the-icc-and-the-pca-an-introduction/
LOCATION:Online\, US
CATEGORIES:International Courts,International Law Section
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210430T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210430T143000
DTSTAMP:20260423T113623
CREATED:20210326T142433Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210429T184859Z
UID:113647-1619787600-1619793000@www.fedbar.org
SUMMARY:Webinar: Examining Court Cases and Procedures at the International Criminal Tribunals
DESCRIPTION:These quarterly topical webinar programs will engage experts working in and around the International Courts and Tribunals about jurisdictional boundaries surrounding the International Court of Justice (ICJ)\, the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL)\, the International Criminal Court (ICC)\, and the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA). \nThe programs aimed at young legal professionals will highlight selected cases\, legal community initiatives\, and employment opportunities at these international bodies ensuring that program participants develop a useful set of skills that will make them competitive in the hiring process\, and\, once hired\, that they have the right “toolbelt” to ensure success in their international court roles. \n\nAbout the Presenters\nLord Iain Bonomy\, Judge\, United Kingdom\, International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals\, UNITED NATIONS \nBorn and educated in Scotland\, Lord Bonomy was successively apprentice solicitor\, solicitor\, advocate\, Queen’s Counsel\, first instance Judge of the Supreme Courts of Scotland\, Judge of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) (2004-2009)\, Judge of the Court of Appeal in Scotland. As Queen’s Counsel he held the post of senior prosecuting counsel in Scotland and prosecuted many serious criminal cases. As a Judge in Scotland and The Hague he presided over trials in many serious\, and some prominent\, criminal cases. In Scotland he also sat in civil cases. As a member of the Court of Appeal he sat in criminal and civil appeals. He retired from his full-time judicial post in 2012. He continues to sit occasionally in serious criminals trials. In Scotland in 2001-2002 and at the ICTY he chaired Working Groups which produced recommendations for improvements in the practice and procedure for serious and international criminal proceedings which were largely implemented. Between 1998 and 2004 and then again between 2010 and 2017 he served as a Surveillance Commissioner for the United Kingdom\, monitoring the deployment by the police and other law enforcement agencies of intrusive and sensitive surveillance practices. Since 2017 he has served as a Judicial Commissioner in the Office of the Investigatory Powers Commissioner. In retirement he has undertaken three assignments for the Scottish Government. From June 2013 to May 2014 he chaired the Infant Cremation Commission\, which examined the practices (many unsatisfactory) followed in dealing with the ashes of cremated babies and infants and produced comprehensive recommendations for improvement. Between June 2014 and April 2015 he chaired a Review of aspects of the rules of evidence and procedure in Scottish criminal prosecutions and reported on changes which should be considered if proposals to abolish the existing requirement for corroborated evidence were to be implemented. Afterwards\, between January and October of 2015 he carried out a Review of the effectiveness of the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002. More recently\, from December 2019 to September 2020 he served as part of the Group of Independent Experts appointed to review the International Criminal Court and provide concrete\, achievable and actionable recommendations aimed at enhancing the performance\, efficiency and effectiveness of the Court and the Rome Statute system. \nHon. Mimi Tsankov\, Board of Director\, Federal Bar Association (Introduction) \nMimi Tsankov is an Immigration Judge at the New York Federal Plaza Immigration Court.  In the past 15 years presiding at Immigration Courts in New York\, Colorado\, and California\, she has held a variety of national leadership roles including Pro Bono Liaison Judge\, contributing editor to the Immigration Judge Benchbook\, Attorney Discipline Adjudicator\, Chair\, Immigration Court – Board of Immigration Appeals Precedent Committee\, Mentor Judge\, and Juvenile Docket Best Practices Committee Chair.  She is currently active in a variety of roles in the National Association of Immigration Judges (NAIJ)\, including Eastern Regional Vice President\, and chairing committees addressing gender equality issues and vulnerable populations cases.  In her personal capacity\, she has been elected to the Federal Bar Association (FBA) Board of Directors\, and serves as Immediate Past President of the FBA Southern District of New York (SDNY) Chapter.  She is a prior Chair of the FBA national International Law Section. Presently she serves on the Board of the Judicial Division and the Diversity and Inclusion Committee.  In Fall 2020\, she chaired a national law student three-part webinar program entitled\, Racial Equality and the SDGs: A Certificate Training Program for Law Students.  This program was accessible to all law students\, nationwide. Judge Tsankov is co-chair of the National Association of Women Judges (NAWJ) Immigration Law Committee\, and is Vice President of Publications.  At the American Bar Association (ABA)\, she is currently serving on a presidential appointment to the Commission on Immigration\, and is a member of the Executive Board of the Judicial Division\, National Conference of Administrative Law Judiciary.   Judge Tsankov serves as an adjunct faculty member at the Fordham Law School in New York.  She publishes regularly and in the past few months has published articles in the California Western Law Review\, the International Bar Association Immigration Law Journal\, and the ABA Human Rights Magazine. She speaks regularly before members of the immigration law community at international\, national\, and regional conferences. \nLinda Strite Murnane\, “Of Counsel”\, Dave Cusack Law Firm\, LLC; Retired Chief Circuit Military Judge (European and Eastern Circuits); Colonel\, USAF\, Ret. (Moderator) \nColonel Linda Strite Murnane (U.S. Air Force\, Retired) is “Of Counsel” with the Dave Cusack Law Firm\, LLC.  She served as the Chief\, Court Management Services Section for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon Leidschendam\, The Netherlands and as the Chief\, Court Management at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia\, in The Hague\, The Netherlands. She served two years as the Acting Senior Legal Officer for Trial Chamber III at the Yugoslavia Tribunal.  As the Chief Court Management Services Section at the Lebanon and Yugoslavia Tribunals\, she was responsible for the electronic filing and evidence systems\, and the support teams comprised of lawyers and other legal support staff proving in court services which operated in English\, French and Arabic or Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian. While at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon she was also designated as the Independent Commissioner and\, upon assignment\, investigated allegations of misconduct involving defence (European spelling convention) counsel and legal representatives of victims who appear before the Tribunal. While at the Yugoslavia Tribunal\, she led teams totaling about 40 staff involved in the daily operation of the courtrooms in which the trials of alleged war criminals were being conducted under the mandate of the United Nations Security Council. Colonel Murnane has participated in training programs as an adjunct faculty member for the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies\, training judges\, lawyers and civilian leaders in Liberia\, Rwanda\, Zambia\, Argentina\, Latvia\, and Papua New Guinea\, on a wide range of legal topics. \n\nRegistration\nRegistration for this webinar is now closed.\nRegistrants will receive webinar access information via calendar invitation approximately 24 hours prior to the session. \nLive Captioning: Should you request live captioning or another accommodation in order to participate in this webinar\, please contact meetings@fedbar.org at least 10 days before the event so we may make the necessary arrangements. \nCancellation Policy: No refunds will be made for cancellations received after the close of business on April 23\, 2021. No-shows will be billed. Substitutions may be made at any time upon notification. Please contact Ariel White at awhite@fedbar.org with cancellation and/or substitution requests. \nInternet Requirements: Virtual programs require suitable internet strength to stream online panels. A minimum internet connection of 800 Kbps is recommended for an optimal attendee experience. Test your connection here.  \n\nCLE\nPlease note that CLE credit is not available for this session. \n\nEmail Communication Policy: By registering for this event\, you agree to receive email communications from the Federal Bar Association and affiliated sponsors of the program concerning event details\, Continuing Legal Education certification\, programming changes\, upcoming events\, surveys\, and post-event communications. \nRecording Disclaimer: By registering for an FBA webinar\, you agree to the recording of audio and visual content presented during the live event and consent to subsequent use of the recording by the FBA. You agree that the recording is the sole property of the FBA and that the recording may be used by the FBA in any manner in its sole and absolute discretion. This recording may include questions and poll responses provided by you during the live event. If you do not consent to the recording and the FBA’s use of the same\, do not register for the event. \nIf you have any questions regarding this program\, please contact Caitlin Rider\, Conference Manager.
URL:https://www.fedbar.org/event/webinar-examining-court-cases-and-procedures-at-the-international-residual-mechanism-for-criminal-tribunals/
LOCATION:Online\, US
CATEGORIES:International Courts
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR