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The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, which has been called the
most significant arbitral body in history, celebrated its 25th
anniversary in 2006. As of mid-2005, the Tribunal had issued over
800 awards and decisions--a total of 600 awards (including partial
awards and awards on agreed terms), 83 interlocutory and interim
awards, and 133 decisions--in resolving almost 3000 cases. The
Tribunal's awards have been described as the most important body of
international arbitration jurisprudence. The significance of these
decisions as persuasive authority is second to none.
The United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC) is a claims reparation program created by the United Nations Security Council in May 1991, after the UN-authorized Allied Coalition Forces' military operations terminated the seven-month invasion and occupation of Kuwait by Iraq and liberated Kuwait. The UNCC was established with the objectives to receive and decide claims from individuals, corporations, and governments against Iraq as arising directly from Iraq's invasion and occupation of Kuwait; and to pay compensation for such claims. Gulf War Reparations and the UN Compensation Commission: Designing Compensation After Conflict is the first collective work on the UNCC claims program by experts who have contributed to its progress, and who have assisted in paving the way for more informed research on the Commission and its jurisprudence. Given its unprecedented, serious and sustained effort within the international community, the two-decade long operations of the UNCC deserve considerable attention and in-depth analysis especially with respect to its impact on the development and progress of international law in the areas of State responsibility and reparations.
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