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Steven Hill: Guarding The Charter And Positioning The UN For A More Legally Resilient Future -By Henry Onyedika Adibe, LL.M

Hill’s appointment is particularly well-suited to the moment for several reasons. The first is Deep Charter-based Expertise. He has long worked with the legal regimes governing use of force, sovereignty, collective security, treaty interpretation, and international accountability. These issues are now at the centre of United Nations Security Council (UNSC) disputes, peace operations, sanctions regimes, and transnational threats.

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As Steven Hill commence duty as the United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs in December 2025, the UN is currently in a crucial period where the integrity of the international legal order is increasingly contested, and the UN’s ability to respond coherently and lawfully to global crises is under heightened scrutiny. Hill’s appointment signals not only a commitment to continuity but also a strategic recalibration of the UN’s legal leadership, one anchored in precision, legal clarity, principled pragmatism, and a deep understanding of underpinnings in multilateral legal dynamics.

Hill arrives at the UN with a career defined by legal rigor and multilateral diplomacy, a distinguished record that blends doctrinal sophistication with operational impact. As Legal Adviser and Director of the Office of Legal Affairs at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), he helped shape the legal frameworks governing collective defense, hybrid threats, emerging technologies, and cooperation with partner states. His tenure was marked by an insistence on legal clarity in politically sensitive contexts ensuring the Alliance’s decisions remained anchored in international law while adaptable to evolving security challenges. He served as a career official at the United States National Security Council between 2021 and 2022.

Prior to NATO, Hill served in senior legal positions in the U.S. Department of State and also in the United States Mission to the United Nations. In these roles, his portfolio spanned diplomatic and international law, treaty interpretation, international judicial cooperation, and environmental law. Hill’s engagement in multilateral treaty processes and cross-regional negotiations earned him a reputation as both a principled interpreter of international law and a skilled architect of compromise.  As an academic juggernaut, Hill has taught international law at academic institutions in China, Europe and the United States.

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Recently, in his role as the Executive Secretary of the International Institute for Justice and the Rule of Law (IIJ), Hill championed the course of engaging stakeholders and justice practitioners in the fight against terrorism, promoting mechanisms of countering terrorism financing, enhancing legal based approaches on transnational crimes and expanding the frontiers of rule of law and justice.

Evidently, it is this combination of doctrinal expertise, diplomatic balance, international exposure and institutional discipline that makes Hill a natural fit for the second-highest legal position in the UN’s Legal Engine Room. As Assistant Secretary-General, Hill becomes the deputy to the UN Legal Counsel, responsible for supporting the formulation of legal advice across the entire UN system, leading strategic planning and organizational governance within the Office of Legal Affairs (OLA), and ensuring coherence across the UN’s legal work.

Hill’s appointment is particularly well-suited to the moment for several reasons. The first is Deep Charter-based Expertise. He has long worked with the legal regimes governing use of force, sovereignty, collective security, treaty interpretation, and international accountability. These issues are now at the centre of United Nations Security Council (UNSC) disputes, peace operations, sanctions regimes, and transnational threats.

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The second is Experience Managing High-Stakes, and Politically Sensitive Legal Questions. From NATO’s cyber posture to questions of attribution in hybrid conflicts and as helmsman of IIJ, Hill’s record portrays a consistent commitment to principled legal advice even under geopolitical pressure, a proven ability to work with diverse geopolitical entities, academic depth and clarity in navigating complex legal questions.

The third is Proven Strategic Leadership. Hill’s deep dose of managerial acumen and his management experience in complex, multinational legal offices makes him uniquely positioned to help steer the OLA’s diverse divisions ranging from peacekeeping law to treaty affairs, from international criminal accountability to institutional law.

The fourth is Diplomatic Skill in Multilateral Settings. Hill’s ability to cultivate and build trust among Member States and regional partners will be critical as the UN seeks to rebuild consensus on foundational legal norms. Having served in multilateral offices, Hill is richly equipped to provide the needed legal and diplomatic skills which the role of ASG requires.

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With Hill’s arrival, this writer anticipates a revitalized and forward-leaning approach to the UN’s legal work. Therefore, this piece suggests a forward-looking agenda, positioning the UN more vibrantly and proactively to tackle several strategic priorities.

The first is Reaffirming the Authority of the UN Charter. At a moment when global power rivalries and political paralysis have strained the UNSC, Hill is expected to assist in reinforcing the Charter’s foundational principles, clarify the scope of UNSC powers, strengthen sanctions procedures, and guide legal debates around peacekeeping mandates and the use of force.

This is a core legal stewardship that is essential for institutional legitimacy.

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The second is Enhancing UN Legal Readiness for Digital and Technological Challenges. Building on his experience in countering financing terrorism and transnational crimes through technology and other mechanisms, Hill is expected to lead efforts in articulating UN-wide legal guidance on cyber operations under international law; address information warfare, disinformation, and digital manipulation; issues of data privacy, examine legal questions around AI, autonomy, and algorithmic decision-making in terrorism, transnational crimes, conflict and governance. This would position the UN at the forefront of the next generation of international legal norms.

The third is Strengthening Accountability Mechanisms and Support for International Justice. Hill’s background aligns with assisting investigative bodies, engaging with international courts and tribunals, reinforcing frameworks for individual and state responsibility, interfacing with justice practitioners and improving cooperation across UN organs on atrocity crimes. His role as ASG may help re-energize global commitment to fight international crimes like genocide.

The fourth agenda is Institutional Coherence and Modernization within the Office of Legal Affairs (OLA). As ASG, Hill is expected to play a key strategic role in harmonizing legal opinions across divisions, strengthening coordination with the UN Legal Advisers Network, enhancing treaty registration and publication practices, and improving internal legal processes and capacity-building for UN field operations. This modernization drive will help ensure OLA remains nimble, dexterous, coherent, and respected.

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The last is Strengthening Stakeholder Relations and Multilateral Partnerships. Hill’s diplomatic acumen positions him to assist the legal affairs department in areas such as deepening engagement with member States, regional organizations (e.g., AU, ASEAN, EU), international courts and tribunals, academia and civil society. Building these bridges is fundamental for tackling transnational legal challenges that no single institution can address alone.

Hill’s appointment is a strategic moment for the UN’s legal leadership. His appointment comes at a time when questions about legality, legitimacy, and institutional authority are central to the UN’s credibility. With competing interpretations of the Charter, escalation of hybrid warfare, contested sanctions practices, and unprecedented technological disruption, the Office of Legal Affairs must be both steadfast and innovative.

Steven Hill represents precisely that blend of legal fidelity and forward-looking strategy. His tenure has the potential to reinvigorate the UN’s legal machinery, strengthen the UN’s normative voice, and ensures that international law properly interpreted and consistently applied remains the backbone of the rules-based order. His position as the Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs will help shape not only the internal work of OLA, but the UN’s global posture as it navigates some of the most complex legal challenges since 80 years of existence.

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Henry Onyedika Adibe, LL.M, is a researcher in International Law.

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