Sannoy Das

Sannoy Das

Lecturer


Biography

Sannoy Das, alongside teaching at Boston University, is an SJD Candidate at Harvard Law School, and Assistant Professor (on leave) at Jindal Global Law School (India). His dissertation deals with the history of postwar international law–shaped on the one hand, by a conflict between the imperatives of empire and anticolonial thought; and on the other, by a scholarly reworking of ideas about liberalism and cosmopolitanism. His earlier publications deal with the regulation of international trade, focusing on questions of third world development. More broadly, his research interests are in the areas of legal history, history of economic thought, and political philosophy. In India, he taught courses on international trade law, civil procedure, the history of international law, and the philosophical foundations of legal personhood. Prior to joining the academy, he was an attorney, focusing on civil and constitutional matters, at the High Court at Calcutta, India. He graduated with top honors from the National Law University, Jodhpur, India with degrees in science and law, and obtained his LLM from Harvard Law School in 2015.

Activities & Engagements

No upcoming activities or engagements.

Courses

International Law: LAW JD 927

4 credits

This course will offer a survey of contemporary international law. We will consider both the classical law of nations and postwar developments, which have shifted the fulcrum of the international system from a relatively exclusive focus on the rights and duties of states inter se (as between themselves) to a broader focus on all of the participants in the contemporary international legal process: not only nation-states, but transnational institutions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), multinational enterprises (MNEs), terrorist networks, criminal syndicates, and individuals. Specific topics, subject to time constraints, will include (1) the history, nature, and sources of international law; (2) the establishment, transformation, and termination of states and other international legal participants; (3) national incorporation of international law, with a focus on core concepts of U.S. foreign relations law; (4) international law's allocation of jurisdiction to make and apply law, as well as selected immunities conferred by international law; (5) international law's effort to protect human dignity through international human rights, the law of war, and international criminal law; (6) control and regulation of the resources of the planet, with a focus on the law of the sea; and (7) the use of force.

FALL 2023: LAW JD 927 A1 , Sep 6th to Dec 6th 2023
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Mon,Wed 10:40 am 12:40 pm 4 Robert D. Sloane LAW 204