The Reckoning: A Lecture Series on Treaty Law, State Succession, and the 1916 Convention
iCourts Lunch seminar with Shelley A.H. Moorhead.
The proceedings initiated by Shelley A.H. Moorhead and ACRRA represent the first effort in history to place the 1916 Treaty of the Danish West Indies simultaneously before multiple international legal and human rights forums, including the first challenge in PCA history by a non-sovereign people to exclusion from arbitration under a colonial-era treaty.
Speaker profile
Shelley A.H. Moorhead is one of the foremost voices in the international reparations movement and the world's leading authority on the legal, diplomatic, and historical dimensions of the 1916 Treaty of the Danish West Indies. As President and Founder of the African-Caribbean Reparations and Resettlement Alliance (ACRRA) — Associate Member of the CARICOM Reparations Commission — he has led the most sustained and institutionally advanced international legal campaign arising from Denmark's colonial governance of the former Danish West Indies.
Mr. Moorhead's public career spans more than two decades at the intersection of Caribbean politics, international diplomacy, and reparative justice. He served as Minister of State for External Affairs in the USVI Office of the Governor from 2015 to 2017 – period surrounding the centennial commemoration of the 1917 transfer of sovereignty — and as Secretary-General and Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Inter-Virgin Islands Council from 2016 to 2017. In 2016 and 2017, he served as Commissioner on the USVI Centennial Commission. From 2006 to 2007, he served as First International Ambassador for Ghana's Joseph Project, delivering formal addresses at Ghana's Parliament and at events across the Republic of Ghana.
His international address record is extensive and sustained. He has engaged Heads of State and he has addressed, among other forums, the UN Special Committee on Decolonization, the African Union, the Danish Parliament, and CARICOM, and has lectured at universities and institutions across the United States, Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean, including the University of Copenhagen, the University of Oslo, the University of Ghana, the University of the West Indies, and Georgia State University. He has been named in peer-reviewed academic scholarship – including Nikita Pliusnin's 2021 Tampere University master's thesis on Danish foreign policy activism in the Global South – as the defining figure in the USVI dimension of the reparations-from-Denmark campaign.
Mr. Moorhead’s standing rests on a precise legal fact: the 1916 Treaty of the Danish West Indies and the Lansing Declaration are a single diplomatic package with two halves – one ceding the Virgin Islands, the other securing U.S. non-objection to Danish sovereignty over Greenland. Both halves have remained continuously in force since 1916. The United States has now placed its own continuing adherence to the Greenland half in public doubt, while neither government has yet been forced to answer for the other. Mr. Moorhead holds a formal third-party treaty interest in that other half, and is the only person who has tested that interest before three international forums simultaneously. He is not an outside commentator on the Denmark-Greenland-U.S. dispute. He holds a direct stake inside the same instrument.
International Proceedings
Under Mr. Moorhead's leadership, ACRRA has initiated three simultaneous international proceedings, all arising from the 1916 Treaty of the Danish West Indies – the first time in history that a single colonial-era treaty has been made the subject of coordinated proceedings across this range of international forums simultaneously. A fourth application, to the European Court of Human Rights, is complete and has not yet been filed. The Reckoning is a pre-litigation tour: it announces the impending filing, which will be filed promptly upon exhaustion of the final domestic remedies currently being pursued.