Description

Book Synopsis
From a divided Berlin to the Hague, the Reagan White House, Nigeria, the forests of Costa Rica, and more, Judge Charles N. Brower shares a personal history of a life spent at the forefront of international justice— and a case for the role of law in preserving global peace.

A judge of the Iran– United States Claims Tribunal for four decades, Charles N. Brower is an internationally recognized leader in arbitration and has handled cases on six continents. With quick wit and a keen eye for adventure, he takes readers on a tour of his extraordinary career.

As a young lawyer fresh from Harvard, Brower quickly made partner at a Wall Street firm. After just four months, however, he left the expected path to join the U.S. State Department, embarking on a career that put him in the thick of Cold War Europe and led to a lifelong focus on international law.

Brower’ s drive carried him around the world and to the heart of our most pressing issues, including human rights, environmentalism, globalization, and governmental ethics. He eventually became the most-appointed American judge ad hoc of the International Court of Justice at the Hague, a tenure interrupted only by his time as an advisor to President Ronald Reagan at the height of the Iran– Contra scandal. At each stop, Brower encountered criminals and victims, advocates and miscreants, especially at the Iran– United States Claims Tribunal, where heated disagreements between judges once erupted into physical violence.

Judging Iran is a frank insider account of the highest echelons of international law. As an active judge to this day, Brower offers a nuanced history of modern arbitration between nations, from our earliest concept of international law to today’ s efforts for justice. And, as a global citizen, he argues that the law is essential in our work for peace.



Table of Contents
Introduction: The World That Sues Together Hews TogetherChapter One: Street Fighting ManChapter Two: Might Makes RightChapter Three: Rug-Pulls, Investments, & ShakedownsChapter Four: How To Sue A StateChapter Five: The Iran ConnectionChapter Six: Judging Iran, Part IChapter Seven: Judging Iran, Part IIChapter Eight: Iran-Contra: What Reagan KnewChapter Nine: Of Parasites & Lousy LoansChapter Ten: Suing SaddamChapter Eleven: Judging Iran, Part IIIChapter Twelve: International Arbitrator, Part IChapter Thirteen: International Arbitrator, Part IIChapter Fourteen: Human RightsChapter Fifteen: The Future

Judging Iran: A Memoir of The Hague, The White

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A Hardback by Hon. Charles N. Brower, Joan Donoghue

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    View other formats and editions of Judging Iran: A Memoir of The Hague, The White by Hon. Charles N. Brower

    Publisher: Disruption Books
    Publication Date: 11/04/2023
    ISBN13: 9781633310704, 978-1633310704
    ISBN10: 1633310701

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    From a divided Berlin to the Hague, the Reagan White House, Nigeria, the forests of Costa Rica, and more, Judge Charles N. Brower shares a personal history of a life spent at the forefront of international justice— and a case for the role of law in preserving global peace.

    A judge of the Iran– United States Claims Tribunal for four decades, Charles N. Brower is an internationally recognized leader in arbitration and has handled cases on six continents. With quick wit and a keen eye for adventure, he takes readers on a tour of his extraordinary career.

    As a young lawyer fresh from Harvard, Brower quickly made partner at a Wall Street firm. After just four months, however, he left the expected path to join the U.S. State Department, embarking on a career that put him in the thick of Cold War Europe and led to a lifelong focus on international law.

    Brower’ s drive carried him around the world and to the heart of our most pressing issues, including human rights, environmentalism, globalization, and governmental ethics. He eventually became the most-appointed American judge ad hoc of the International Court of Justice at the Hague, a tenure interrupted only by his time as an advisor to President Ronald Reagan at the height of the Iran– Contra scandal. At each stop, Brower encountered criminals and victims, advocates and miscreants, especially at the Iran– United States Claims Tribunal, where heated disagreements between judges once erupted into physical violence.

    Judging Iran is a frank insider account of the highest echelons of international law. As an active judge to this day, Brower offers a nuanced history of modern arbitration between nations, from our earliest concept of international law to today’ s efforts for justice. And, as a global citizen, he argues that the law is essential in our work for peace.



    Table of Contents
    Introduction: The World That Sues Together Hews TogetherChapter One: Street Fighting ManChapter Two: Might Makes RightChapter Three: Rug-Pulls, Investments, & ShakedownsChapter Four: How To Sue A StateChapter Five: The Iran ConnectionChapter Six: Judging Iran, Part IChapter Seven: Judging Iran, Part IIChapter Eight: Iran-Contra: What Reagan KnewChapter Nine: Of Parasites & Lousy LoansChapter Ten: Suing SaddamChapter Eleven: Judging Iran, Part IIIChapter Twelve: International Arbitrator, Part IChapter Thirteen: International Arbitrator, Part IIChapter Fourteen: Human RightsChapter Fifteen: The Future

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