The Procedural Aspects of International Law Institute announces the winner of the 2006-07 Professor Richard B. Lillich Prize for the best S.J.D. or Ph.D. Dissertation on a topic of procedural international law
The Board of Trustees, Advisory Council, and Senior Fellows of the PAIL Institute are delighted to announce the results of the 2006-07, Richard B. Lillich Prize for the best PhD or SJD dissertation published on a subject related to the procedural aspects of international law.
This biennium's Lillich Prize is awarded to:
Dr. Antonis Antoniadis, for his dissertation "The European Community and its Member States as WTO Members: A Constitutional Perspective," submitted to the University of Birmingham. The award citation for Dr. Antoniadis' submission indicated that it was a laudable contribution to international legal literature on a pressing and relevant issue of international governance. The prize jury found Dr. Antoniadis' dissertation to be in-depth and well-researched, engagingly written and persuasively argued.
The Prize carries with it an award of US$5,000.
Dr. Antoniadis work will appear, in due course, in the PAIL Institute Monograph Series, published by Martinus Nijhoff/Brill.
The PAIL Institute thanks all who submitted work for the Lillich Prize. An announcement for the submission conditions for the 2008-09 biennial Lillich Prize will be made in early 2010.