Published on 25 November 2022 in Client Alerts

Client Alert: Early Bird Pricing for The London International Boundary Conference

Registrations for the London International Boundary Conference (“LIBC”) are now open.  Early Bird Pricing until 2 December 2022.  In order to register, please visit: https://www.londoninternationalboundaryconference.com/register.2022_template.asp

The LIBC 2022 will provide a unique and multidisciplinary insight into the complex world of international boundary and territorial questions.  Like previous LIBC conferences, this year’s convention strives to bring together specialists from international law, the social sciences, history, as well as technical experts – not usually an assemblage you will find at the same venue – to shed light on the debates of the day, emergent challenges and regional hotspots.

The fifth London International Boundary Conference will take place on 12 and 13 December 2022. The event will take a hybrid format. The first day of events will take place at the King’s College Stamford Street Lecture Theatre, located south of the river in the Waterloo Campus (127 Stamford Street, London SE1 9NQ) and will be broadcasted live to those who have registered.  The second conference day will be held fully online.

Conference Pricing (12-13 December 2022)

Early bird special – Register by 2 December 2022

Individual £50 + VAT*
Early bird Individual £40 + VAT*
Full-time Academic/ Government/ NGO £25 + VAT*
Early bird Full-time Academic/ Government/ NGO £20 + VAT*
Full-time Student** £15 + VAT*
Early bird Full-time Student £10 + VAT*

 * VAT will be charged at the prevailing rate of 20%

** Students may be required to show ID on arrival

For more information on the London International Boundary Conference 2022, please visit http://www.londoninternationalboundaryconference.com/default.asp or email info@londoninternationalboundaryconference.com.

More Client Alerts

| Client Alerts

European Commission set to adopt first European Space Law

In the brief 60 years of space flight, humanity has sent over 60,000 space objects and 1 million pieces of smaller debris into orbit around the planet.  This has created the risk of a legal and physical log-jam in space.  The congestion and space-junk problems are projected to become even more acute as the space race broadens its participants.

Learn more

| Client Alerts

Five States join calls for a moratorium on deep-sea mining at the 29th Session of the International Seabed Authority

During the 29th annual session of the International Seabed Authority (“ISA”), Malta, Tuvalu, Honduras, Guatemala and Austria declared their support for a precautionary pause on deep-sea mining.  To date, now over thirty States have called for a halt in the exploitation of the deep seabed minerals.  These calls come as the ISA struggles to adopt a final set of regulations on mining exploitation.

Learn more

| Client Alerts

European Union set to exit the Energy Charter Treaty, citing EU deadlock on proposed climate change reforms

On 30 May 2024, the European Council adopted decisions enabling the European Union (“EU”) to denounce (the proper international law term for ‘withdraw from’)  the Energy Charter Treaty (“ECT”). 

Learn more

| Client Alerts

The Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response Accord: Progress and Challenges

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed significant gaps in the global health system, leading to immense human and economic losses.  In response, the World Health Organization (“WHO”) and its member States decided to draft a comprehensive international treaty—the Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response Accord.

Learn more
View all