Chimène Keitner

Alfred & Hanna Fromm Professor of International Law UC Hastings College of the Law

  • San Francisco CA

keitnerc_at_uchastings.edu

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UC Hastings College of the Law

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Biography

Professor Chimène Keitner is a leading authority on international law and civil litigation, and served as the 27th Counselor on International Law in the U.S. Department of State. She has authored two books and dozens of articles, essays, and book chapters on questions surrounding the relationship among law, communities, and borders, including issues of jurisdiction, extraterritoriality, foreign sovereign and foreign official immunity, and the historical understandings underpinning current practice in these areas.

Professor Keitner holds a bachelor's degree in history and literature with high honors from Harvard, a JD from Yale Law School, where she was a Paul & Daisy Soros Fellow, and a doctorate in international relations from Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar.

Among other professional service, Professor Keitner has served on the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law and as Co-Chair of the ASIL International Law in Domestic Courts Interest Group. She is a member of the American Law Institute and an Adviser on the ALI's Fourth Restatement of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States.

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Areas of Expertise

Cyberlaw
International Law and International Tribunals
International Civil Litigation
International Dispute Resolution
Foreign Relations Law
Transnational Law
Foreign Sovereign Immunity
National Security Law

Education

Yale Law School

J.D.

Law

2002

Oxford University, St. Antony's College

D.Phil

International Relations

2001

Oxford University. New College

M.Phil

International Relations

1998

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Affiliations

  • American Law Institute : Member (Since 2013)
  • State Bar of California : Member
  • U.S. Supreme Court Bar : Member
  • American Society of International Law
  • International Law Association

Languages

  • French
  • English

Courses

Evidence

The law of evidence, including relevancy, hearsay, judicial notice, burden of proof, and presumptions; functions of judge and jury; competency and privileges of witnesses; principal rules of admissibility and exclusion of testimony of witnesses and documents.

International Law

Legal disputes routinely cross international borders. Twenty-first century lawyers need to know how to handle international and transnational disputes, whether they involve business transactions, trade, human rights, the environment, or the use of military force. This course will introduce students to the international legal system and provide the necessary foundation for future study and practice in international and transnational law. We will study how and by whom international law is made, interpreted, and applied; how it constrains (or fails to constrain) the behavior of nation-states, multinational corporations, and individuals; and how it interacts with domestic law, with a focus on U.S. state and federal law.

Democracy, Technology, and Security

This colloquium will provide students with the opportunity to hear from and interact with experts in the fields of national security law, cyberlaw, and social media regulation, while providing a forum for students to produce papers based on their individual research interests within these fields. We will cover topics related to Russian election interference, cross-border regulation of speech and data, and international law in cyberspace.

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