Stockton Center for International Law

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The Stockton Center for International Law is an American research center at the Center for Naval Warfare Studies at the Naval War College. The center is focused on original research and analysis in international law and military operations. [1] Predominantly, the Stockton Center has been involved in the review of various military manuals under international law, including the Tallinn Manual 2.0, the San Remo Manual and the Woomera Manual. [2] Additionally, the center is responsible for the International Law Studies Journal, the editor-in-chief of which is the current Charles H. Stockton Professor of International Law, Professor James Kraska. [3] The center routinely organizes workshops and seminars on contemporary issues in international law. [2]

Contents

History

International Law at the Naval War College

The study of international law has historically been crucial to the courses and instruction at the Naval War College, and has proved indispensable in complementing the institution's focus on military operations and international relations. [4] Initially, the Naval War College focused on four primary areas relating to international law. First, the college prioritizes the instruction of resident students in international law through seminars, research work and discussion of case studies. Secondly, the college has been closely involved with the “Blue Book Series of International Law Situations and Notes” which was first published in 1894. [4] The Naval War College has collaborated in the publication of 32 out of the first 54 volumes of the series, on topics varying from “Collective Security under International Law” to “The Law of War and Neutrality at Sea”. [4] Third, the college also provided correspondence courses in international law aimed at the graduate level, which focused on international relations, the laws of peace and the laws of war, and the functioning of international organizations. [4] Finally, the Naval War College has been extensively involved with the Navy Department in the drafting and reviewing of manuals and publications which provide guidance with regard to warfare at sea. Charles H. Stockton, who was the president of the Naval War College at the time, prepared the first set of manuals on naval warfare titled ‘U.S. Naval War Code 1900’. [4]

Charles H. Stockton and the Naval War College

In July 1951 the Naval War College had its first full-time civilian appointment, which was for a professor of international law. On 6 October 1967 the position was formally named the ‘Charles H. Stockton Chair of International Law’, after the notable naval officer and academician, Charles Stockton. [5]

Charles Stockton joined the Navy during the Civil War, and was inducted in the Naval Academy class of 1865 where he was awarded the Civil War medal. During his time in the Navy, Stockton observed multiple instances which demonstrated the significance of international law in naval operations, and the urgent need for naval officers to undertake a study of the practical applications of international law. In the late 1980s, support for the Naval War College as an educational institution declined, given its heavy focus on history, theory and case studies. [5] It was around this time that the Congress authorized the construction of the new building of the college at Coaster's Harbor Island, which occurred under the supervision of Charles Stockton. Stockton recognized the importance and practical utility of international law to the day-to-day operations of the Navy, in addition to subjects such as naval history, strategy and tactics. Under Stockton, the international law course focused primarily on case studies and hypothetical situations that a naval officer may encounter, and considered not only the legal but also the political and ethical considerations of the various approaches to such situations. These situations that Stockton created and published eventually transformed into the Blue Book Series. [5]

Organization

Charles H. Stockton Professor of International Law

In 1967, the position of the chair of international law at the Naval War College was officially denominated as the Charles H. Stockton Professor of International Law. [6] The Stockton Chair reports to the dean of the Center for Naval Warfare Studies. The rationale of the position is to emphasize the importance of international law in the education of naval officers. [7] The Chairholder is often a recognized authority on areas including the historical development of international law, law of the sea and law of armed conflict, among others. [7]

Howard S. Levie Professor

The Professor Howard S. Levie Military Chair of Operational Law was established by the president of the Naval War College in 1994 to commemorate Professor Levie's contribution to the college. [8] Professor Levie is one of the world's foremost authorities on international law and armed conflict, having published various treatises on the law of war including Terrorism in War: The Law of War Crimes,  Prisoners of War in International Armed Conflict, and  The Code International Armed Conflict. [8]

Programs and courses

Elective programs [9]

Stockton Center Visiting Research Scholar Program

The Visiting Research Scholar Program at the Stockton Center hosts established professionals and scholars of international law as well as exceptional emerging scholars for a period of two to three months. [10] The purpose of the program is to expand and diversify the knowledge and perspectives shared at the Naval War College. [11]

Publications

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Naval War College</span> Staff college for the United States Navy at Naval Station Newport in Newport, Rhode Island

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">John B. Hattendorf</span> American naval historian

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geoffrey Till</span>

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Maritime security is an umbrella term informed to classify issues in the maritime domain that are often related to national security, marine environment, economic development, and human security. This includes the world's oceans but also regional seas, territorial waters, rivers and ports, where seas act as a “stage for geopolitical power projection, interstate warfare or militarized disputes, as a source of specific threats such as piracy, or as a connector between states that enables various phenomena from colonialism to globalization”. The theoretical concept of maritime security has evolved from a narrow perspective of national naval power projection towards a buzzword that incorporates many interconnected sub-fields. The definition of the term maritime security varies and while no internationally agreed definition exists, the term has often been used to describe both existing, and new regional and international challenges to the maritime domain. The buzzword character enables international actors to discuss these new challenges without the need to define every potentially contested aspect of it. Maritime security is of increasing concern to the global shipping industry, where there are a wide range of security threats and challenges. Some of the practical issues clustered under the term of maritime security include crimes such as piracy, armed robbery at sea, trafficking of people and illicit goods, illegal fishing or marine pollution. War, warlike activity, maritime terrorism and interstate rivalry are also maritime security concerns.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Stockton</span>

Charles Herbert Stockton was a rear admiral in the United States Navy and the U.S. Navy's first uniformed expert in international law. Stockton served as the President of the Naval War College, and later served as President of the George Washington University from 1910 to 1918

The Charles H. Stockton Chair of International Law at the United States Naval War College has its origins in the Naval War College's oldest civilian academic post. The first civilian academic at the College, James R. Soley was appointed in 1885 to lecture on international law. Dr. Freeman Snow of Harvard University gave lectures on the subject in 1894, his death in the midst of the academic program led to the appointment then Commander Charles Stockton to complete his lectures and to publish them for the use of the Navy. Stockton prepared a new edition in 1898, teaching classes in the subject. In 1901, Professoe John Bassett Moore lectured on international law and recommended that the college appoint Harvard University Law professor George Grafton Wilson as the visiting professor. Wilson lectured annually from 1901 to 1937. From 1946 to 1953, Professor Manley Hudson of Harvard regularly came from Cambridge to give the College's International Law lectures.

A Maritime Exclusion Zone (MEZ) is a military exclusion zone at sea. The concept is not the subject of an explicit treaty, and there has been variation in naming including: "naval exclusion zone", "maritime security zone", "blockade zone", "maritime operational zone", "area subject to long distance blockade" and "area dangerous to shipping".

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard H. Shultz</span>

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James Kraska is an internationally acclaimed American scholar and a distinguished professor of public international maritime law specializing in the international law of the sea and the law of maritime operations, and naval warfare. He is the current Chairman and Charles H. Stockton Professor of International Maritime Law at Stockton Center for International Law, United States Naval War College. He is also a Visiting Professor of Law and John Harvey Gregory Lecturer on World Organization at Harvard Law School. In a multifaceted academic, professional, and societal career over the past three decades, Kraska has been an embodiment of high intellectual calibre and public leadership vision to make the world more equal, secure, and sustainable. His perceptive and pioneering research in diverse areas of international maritime law is testament to his intellectual tenacity.

References

  1. "Stockton Center for International Law". usnwc.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-11.
  2. 1 2 James Kraska, Letter from the Chairman, STOCKTON CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 2019 ANNUAL REPORT
  3. "Stockton Center for International Law". usnwc.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-11.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Robbins, Thomas H. (1956). "The Study of International Law at the Naval War College". The American Journal of International Law. 50 (3): 659–663. ISSN   0002-9300. JSTOR   2195515.
  5. 1 2 3 Schmitt, Michael; Green, Leslie. "Rear Admiral Charles H. Stockton, the Naval War College, and the Law of Naval Warfare". International Law Studies Journal. 71: 1–56.
  6. "Stockton Center for International Law". usnwc.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-11.
  7. 1 2 History, Stockton Center for International Law, https://dnnlgwick.blob.core.windows.net/portals/0/NWCDepartments/Stockton%20Center%20International%20Law/Stockton%20Chair.pdf?sr=b&si=DNNFileManagerPolicy&sig=cevHH4lhtK4YtpRpCz03YZvBq2rqZv1jtUhdkKrnHVA%3D
  8. 1 2 Grunawalt, Richard. "Professor Howard Levie and the Law of War". International Law Studies Journal. 70.
  9. STOCKTON CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 2019 ANNUAL REPORT, USNWC
  10. Stockton Center for International Law Visiting Research Scholar Program, https://dnnlgwick.blob.core.windows.net/portals/0/NWCDepartments/Stockton%20Center%20International%20Law/SCIL%20Visiting%20Research%20Scholar%20Program.pdf?sr=b&si=DNNFileManagerPolicy&sig=g0Ux9KhQuqFspaaCzYn%2FWm%2Fq4QmLBVAg7MJSRgu51zw%3D
  11. "Stockton Center for International Law". usnwc.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-11.