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Regular version of the site
ФКН
Contacts

Moscow, 3 Bolshoy Trekhsvyatitelsky Pereulok, rooms 227, 228b

ADMINISTRATION
Professor Vera Rusinova

Head of the School of International Law
E-mail: vrusinova@hse.ru

Professor Daria Boklan

Deputy Head of the School of International Law
E-mail: dboklan@hse.ru

Svetlana Smirnova
Manager Svetlana Smirnova

E-mail: svetlana.smirnova@hse.ru

Book
Law of International Trade in the Region of the Caucasus, Central Asia and Russia

Aliyev A., Babkina E., Dmitrikova E. et al.

Brill, Nijhoff, 2022.

Article
Article 17.6(ii) of the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement: Waiting for Chekhov’s Gun to Go Off

Rovnov Y.

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DISPUTE SETTLEMENT. 2024. Vol. 15. No. 1. P. 106-123.

Book chapter
Russian Approaches to International Law
In press

Rusinova V.

In bk.: The Oxford Handbook of International Law in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. Ch. 22. P. 1-21.

Working paper
MANDATORY CORPORATE HUMAN RIGHTS DUE DILIGENCE MODELS: SHOOTING BLANKS?

Rusinova V., Sergei K.

Law. LAW. Высшая школа экономики, 2021

The Article Written by Vera Rusinova and Ekaterina Martynova published in ‘Israel Law Review’

The article written by Professor Vera Rusinova and Lecturer Ekaterina Martynova titled ‘Fighting Cyber Attacks with Sanctions: Digital Threats, Economic Responses’ has been published in the first issue of 2024 in the ‘Israel Law Review’ 

The Article Written by Vera Rusinova and Ekaterina Martynova published in ‘Israel Law Review’

© freepik

This article contributes to the understanding of why states resort to targeted, or smart, sanctions to meet the threat of cyber intrusions and whether this type of response is a forced measure or an effective tool to halt, prevent and punish attacking states. The tools of analysis used in the article are legal positivism and political theories, including Mancur Olson's theory of groups and Francesco Giumelli's analytical framework for assessment of sanctions. The authors address the effectiveness of sanctions as a reaction to cyber-enabled activities through the lens of regulation introduced in the United States, the European Union and the United Kingdom, which are the most developed counter-cyber sanction regimes, analysing publicly known cases of cyber-related sanctions.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/israel-law-review/article/abs/fighting-cyber-attacks-with-sanctions-digital-threats-economic-responses/FB637AD97F9D4FAF83506F08C09635D9