Giorgio
Monti is Laura H. Carnell Professor of Law
at Temple Law School and a co-convenor of The Oxford Process on International
Law Protections in Cyberspace. His scholarship engages with issues of
international law, interpretation and cybersecurity, with an emphasis on
treaties, norms and other forms of international regulation. He is a
non-resident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and an
elected member of the American Law Institute, where he served as an adviser on
its project to draft a Fourth Restatement on the Foreign Relations Law of the
United States. In 2016, he was elected by the General Assembly of the
Organization of the American States to a four-year term on the OAS’s
Inter-American Juridical Committee. There, he has served as the rapporteur on
binding and non-binding agreements as well as the rapporteur on improving the
transparency of state views on international law’s application to cyberspace.
Duncan’s books include the award-winning Oxford Guide to Treaties (OUP, 2nd
ed., 2020), International Law (with Allen Weiner) and (with Jens Ohlin)
Defending Democracies: Combatting Foreign Election Interference in a Digital
Age (OUP, 2020).