I was saddened to hear of the passing of Justice Florentino Feliciano, one of the members of the original WTO Appellate and a distinguished international jurist. Toy brought his brilliant and razor-sharp mind to whatever task he had and was at his best in harmonizing differing bodies of international law as he did in early WTO caselaw as presiding appellator in the Shrimp and Gasoline cases. With an early book in 1961 on "Law and Minimum World Public Order" coauthored with Yale Law Professor Myers McDougal, Justice Feliciano, over the next several decades, did as much or more than any international jurist to promote a world of optimal public order including sustainable development. A collection of essays in his honor was published in 2005 by Cambridge University Press under the title "Law in the Service of Human Dignity: Essays in Honour of Florentino Feliciano" (edited by Steve Charnovitz, Debra P. Steger, and Peter Van den Bossche). The essay by Professor Michael Reisman, titled "A judge's judge" captures the respect for Justice Feliciano shared throughout the international legal community. The photo below taken in April 2009 at Yale Law School shows Justice Feliciano with Carolyn Lamm and Steve Charnovitz.