31. | Wittich, Stephan : The International Law Commission's articles on the responsibility of states for internationally wrongful acts adopted on second reading, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The International Law Commission's articles on the responsibility of states for internationally wrongful acts adopted on second reading / Wittich, Stephan REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Leiden journal of international law : vol. 15; no. 4., p. 891-920. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2002. - ISSN 0922-1565 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
|
|
32. | Okafor-Obasi, Obasi : The enforcement of state obligations to respect and ensure human rights in international law, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The enforcement of state obligations to respect and ensure human rights in international law / Okafor-Obasi, Obasi, 149 p.. - Potsdam : MenschenRechtsZentrum, 2003. - ISSN 1435-9154 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. I. THE NATURE AND FORM OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1. The acceptance of the existence of an international legal order 2. The legal position of the individual in international law II. OBLIGATIONS OF STATES IN THE PROTECTION OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Treaty-based human rights obligations 2. The nature of treaty-based human rights obligations 3. The ”absolute” and ”objective” character of human rights treaty obligations 4. Human rights conventions as self-contained regimes 5. The problem of characterisation of human rights obligations of states III. HUMAN RIGHTS OBLIGATIONS ARISING FROM GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1. Obligations erga omnes and human rights norms 2. The outlawing of genocide as obligation erga omnes 3. Protection from slavery as obligation erga omnes 4. The outlawing of acts of aggression as obligation erga omnes 5. Protection from racial discrimination as obligation erga omnes 6. The basic rights of the human person as obligation erga omnes 7. Jus Cogens and the search for peremptory norms of human rights 8. International crimes and human rights norms 9. The relationship between the concepts: erga omnes, jus cogens, international crime and human rights IV. INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS FOR THE COERCIVE ENFORCEMENT OF STATE OBLIGATIONS TO ‘RESPECT AND ENSURE’ HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Countermeasures as consequences of breach of treaties in international law 2. Application of reprisals for the enforcement of treaty-based human rights obligations 3. Intervention for the protection of human rights in international law 4. Intervention by the Security Council for the protection of human rights: the situation before the East-West détente 5. Humanitarian intervention after the end of the Cold War 6. The legal nature of ECOWAS intervention in the Liberian Civil War 7. The legality of NATO’s intervention in Kosovo 8. Some instances of intervention with mixed motives V. NON-FORCEFUL MEASURES FOR THE ENFORCEMENT OF STATES’ HUMAN RIGHTS OBLIGATIONS 1. Economic and financial pressure as means of enforcing states’ obligation to respect and observe human rights 2. The application of the clausula rebus sic stantibus for the protection of human rights 3. The enforcement of human rights through the World Bank 4. The enforcement of human rights through the ILO 5. Diplomatic recognition as an instrument for securing a state's respect and promotion of human rights 6. Refusal to comply with an extradition agreement as a means of enforcing a state’s human rights obligations 7. Denial of immunity as a means of enforcing a state’s human rights obligations 8. Publicity as an instrument for the enforcement of human rights VI. JUDICIAL ENFORCEMENT OF STATE OBLIGATIONS TO ‘RESPECT AND ENSURE’ HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Enforcement of human rights through International Criminal Tribunals 2. The International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia 3. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda 4. The International Special Court of Sierra Leone INDEX WORDS:
|
|
33. | O'Connell, Mary Ellen : Evidence of terror, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Evidence of terror / O'Connell, Mary Ellen REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of conflict and security : vol. 7; no. 1., p. 19-36. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2002. - ISSN 1467-7954 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/jconsl/hdb/Volume_07/Issue_01/ |
|
34. | Wellens, Karel : Th UN Security Council and new threats to the peace, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Th UN Security Council and new threats to the peace : back to the future / Wellens, Karel REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of conflict and security : vol. 8; no. 1., p. 15-70. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. - ISSN 1467-7954 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-39; Geneva conventions;
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/jconsl/hdb/Volume_08/Issue_01/ |
|
35. | Chakma, Suhas : Short-circuiting justice in the name of terror, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Short-circuiting justice in the name of terror / Chakma, Suhas REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Indigenous affairs : no. 3., 46 p.. - Copenhagen : IWGIA, 2003. - ISSN 1024-3283 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Other articles are: . 1. ASIA : asserting indigenous peoples' rights is not an act of terrorism. 2. AFRICA : the impact of the congolese conflict on the indigenous Pygmy population. 3. The martyedom of Ken Saro-Wiwa and the activities of multinational oil companies in the Ogoni region of Nigeria, by Vincent Idemyor. 4. SOUTH AMERICA : The Camisea project and indigenous rights, by Beatriz Huertas Castillo. 5. NORTH AMERICA AND ARCTIC: the Olympic land grab, by Noami Klein. 6. FINLAND in a process of ratifying ILO convention no. 169, by Tanja Joona. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland NOTE (GENERAL): GC-29 (ICCPR); CRC; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in idenpendent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
|
36. | Pauwelyn, Joost : A typology of multilateral treaty obligations, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial A typology of multilateral treaty obligations : are WTO obligations bilateral or collective in nature? / Pauwelyn, Joost REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law : vol. 14; no. 5., p. 907-952. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
|
37. | Hoeksema, Tammo (comp. by) : Human rights and terrorism, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and terrorism / Hoeksema, Tammo (comp. by) ; Laak, Jan ter, 148 p.. - Hague : Netherlands Helsinki Committee, OSCE, 2003. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: Terrorism: roots and prevention. PARt II: Dilemma's with regard to human rights and terrorism. PART III : Human rights versus security: a crucial dialogue INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ECHR; Guidelines on human rights and terrorism (CoE); |
|
38. | Nordblad, Robin : Enforcement of World Trade Organization law , 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Enforcement of World Trade Organization law / Nordblad, Robin REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: The Finnish yearbook of international law (FYBIL) : 2002 : vol. XIII / Koskenniemi, M. (Ed.-in-Chief), p. 201-244. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2004. ISBN 90-04-14197-9 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
|
|
39. | Fitzmaurice, Malgosia : Contemporary issues in the law of treaties, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Contemporary issues in the law of treaties / Fitzmaurice, Malgosia ; Elias, Olufemi, xvi, 398 p.. - Utrecht : Eleven International publ., 2005. ISBN 90-77596-06-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Chapter One: The Identification and Character of Treaties and Treaty Obligations Between States:. 1. Introduction; 2. The Definition of Treaty in the Vienna Convention; 3. informal Arrangements and 'Soft Law'; 4. Conclusions. Chapter Two: Actors and Factors in the Treaty-Making Process:. 1. Introduction; 2. The Stages in the Treaty-Making Process Considered; 3. The Actors; 4. Negotiation and Amendment of Conventions; 5. inter-Governmental Organizations; 6. NGOs and Associations; 7. The European Union; 8. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Three: Aspects of the Law Relating to Material Breach of Treaty. 1. Introduction; 2. The Relationship Between Material Breach and State Responsibility; 3. Breach of Treaty and the Different Types of Treaty Obligations: the Legacy of Fitzmaurice's Classification; 4. The Notion of the 'injured State' and the Law of Treaties; 5. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Four: The Doctrine of Fundamental Change of Circumstances Revisited; 1. Introduction; 2. The International Law Commission and the Codification of the Doctrine of Fundamental Change of Circumstances; 3. Some Decisions of International Courts on the Doctrine of Fundamental Change of Circumstances; 4. Fundamental Change of Circumstances and the ABM Treaty; 5. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Five: Optional Clause Declarations and the Law of Treaties; 1. Introduction; 2. The Main Characteristics of the Optional Clause System; 3. Legal Character of Optional Clause Declarations and Principles of Interpretation; 4. The Jurisprudence of the PCIJ and the ICJ; 5. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Six: Methods of Expression of Consent to Be Bound By A Treaty; 1. Introduction; 2. Consent To Be Bound and the VCLT; 3. New Developments; 4. The Special Case of the 1994 Implementation Agreement to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea; 5. Conclusions. Chapter Seven: The Law of Treaties and the Relationship Between the Security Council and the International Criminal Court; 1. Introduction; 2. Does Article 16 of the ICC Statute Create A 'Treaty' Relationship Between the ICC and the United Nations?; 3. The Relationship Agreement Between the UN and the ICC; 4. The Problem of Competence De La Comptence. The ICC as a Party to an Agreement and as a Judge with respect to That Agreement; 5. Conclusion. Chapter Eight: The Kyoto Protocol Compliance Regime and the Law of Treaties; 1. Introduction; 2. The Kyoto Protocol and its Compliance Regime; 3. The Kyoto Protocol and the Law of Treaties; 4. Conclusion. Chapter Nine: Conflicts Between Environmental Treaties; 1. Introduction; 2. The Law Concering Successive Treaties; 3. Practical Application of the Relevant Law in the Environmental Field; 4. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Ten: The Gabcikovo-Nagymaros Case and the Law of Treaties; 1. Introduction; 2. The Factual Background relating to the Law of Treaties; 3. The Terms of the Special Agreement and the Law of Treaties; 4. The Judgment; 5. Pacta Sunt Servanda; 6. Concluding Remarks. Chapter Eleven: The Bakassi Peninsula Case and Article 46 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties; 1. Introduction; 2. The Rule in Article 46 and General International Law; 3. The Arguments of the Parties and the Judgment of the Court; 4. The Declaration of Judge Rezek, Treaties Relating To Territory and 'Manifest Violation' ; 5. Concluding Remarks. Index. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Spain / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Climate change convention; Kyoto protocol; Montreal protocol; Convention on biological diversity; Helsinki convention; Gdansk convention; |
|
40. | Von Hippel, Karin (ed.) : Europe confronts terrorism, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Europe confronts terrorism / Von Hippel, Karin (ed.), xv, 294 p.. - Hampshire : Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. ISBN 1-4039-9080-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction: Europe Confronts Terrorism, K.Von Hippel. PART I: COUNTRY CASE STUDIES. France; K.A. O'Brien. Germany; T.Szyszkowitz. Greece; T.Dokos. Italy; D.Sagramoso & A.Nativi. Nordic Responses; S.Myrdal. Spain: Part I - Counter-terrorism in Spain - An Overview; A.Ramos. Spain: Part II - Islamic Extremism; J.Jordán & N.Horsburgh. The United Kingdom; P.Cornish. PART II: EUROPE AND AMERICA: TRANSATLANTIC TENSION AND CONVERGENCE. The European Union; T.Szyszkowitz. A View from America: Tactical Unity, Strategic Divide; V.LaFleur. Transatlantic Counter-Terrorism Cooperation after 11 September 2001; J.Stevenson. Military Reforms: Closing the Capability Gap; T.Garden. Balancing Security and Human Rights: Post 9/11 Reactions in the United States and Europe; C.Giorgetti. Conclusions: A Three-Year Progress Report and Tackling Root Causes; K.Von Hippel. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Europe, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, United States, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland
URL http://www.palgrave.com/products/Catalogue.aspx?is=1403990808#Contents |
|
41. | International law as an order of peace, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a monograph International law as an order of peace / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Völkerrecht als Wertordnung : common values in international law : Festschrift für/Essays in honour of Christian Tomuschat / Dupuy, Pierre-Marie ... [et al.], p. 703-866. - Kehl : N.P. Engel Verlag, 2006 . ISBN 3-88357-136-9 LANGUAGE: ENG, GER ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. Armin von Bogdandy: The Telos of international law: Christian Tomuschat's general course and the evolution of the universalist tradition. 2. Jorge Cardona Llorens: Las excepciones al principo que prohibe el uso de la fuerza:reflexiones a la luz de la practica reciente. 3. Jost Delbrück: Challenges to international law in the wake of the 'war' on global terrorism. 4. Bardo Fassbender: Hans Kelsen und die Vereinten Nationen. 5. Jochen ABr. Frowein: The UN anti-terrorism administration and the rule of law. 6. Wolff heintschel von heinegg: Countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction: the case of non-state actors. 7. Martina Palm: Internationaler Umweltschutz und Sicherheit. 8. gerd Seidel: Völkerrechtliches Interventionsverbot. 9. Daniel Thurer und Felix Schwendimann: Kampf gegen den Terrorismus - Kamp für das Recht. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; |
|
42. | Tomuschat, Christian : Human rights, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights : between idealism and realism / Tomuschat, Christian. - 2. ed.., xlix, 414 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P. Oxford U. P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-923274-1 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Belgium / Burundi / Czech Republic / Dominican Republic / France / Germany / Greece / India / Ireland / Pakistan / Portugal / Russian Federation / South Africa / USSR / Spain / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Treaty of Versailles; ICJ statute; ADRD; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; ECHRP-1; ESC; CERD; CEDAW; ICESCR; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; AMR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
|
43. | Wicker, Christian : The concepts of proportionality and state crimes in international law, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The concepts of proportionality and state crimes in international law : an analysis of the scope of proportionality in the right of self-defence and in the regime of international countermeasures and an evaluation of the concept of state crimes / Wicker, Christian - (Schriften zum internationalen und zum öffentlichen Recht ; 69), 177 p.. - Frankfurt am Main : Peter Lang, 2006. - ISSN 0943-173X ISBN 3-631-55884-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Proportionality in the right of self-defence. 2. Proportionality inthe regime of countermeasures. 3. Differences, similarities and a new approach. 4. The concept of state crimes. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-51; Geneva conventions; ILC draft articles on responsibility of states for internationally wrongful acts; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Barcelona traction dictum; |
|
44. | Crawfor, James (ed.) : The British year book of international law 2008 , 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The British year book of international law 2008 : seventy-ninth year of issue / Crawfor, James (ed.) ; Lowe, Vaughan ; Sir Ian Brownlie (Editorial Committee, Chairman), xvii, 889 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978--0-19-958039-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. THE DOCTRINE OF INCORPORATION REVISITED, by Roger O’Keefe. 2. THE DENUNCIATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES, by Yogesh Tyagi. 3. STATUS OF SETTLERS IMPLANTED BY ILLEGAL TERRITORIAL REGIMES, by Yaël Ronen. 4. INVESTMENT ARBITRATION AND THE LAW OF COUNTERMEASURES, by Martins Paparinskis. 5. THE FUNCTION OF LAW IN THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY: 75 YEARS AFTER, by Martti Koskenniemi. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; ICESCR; AMR; ICCPR; Genocide convention; CERD; ICCPR-OP; ECHR; |
|
45. | Eckes, Christina : EU counter-terrorist policies and fundamental rights, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph EU counter-terrorist policies and fundamental rights : the case of individual sanctions / Eckes, Christina, xxxiv, 478 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-957376-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction. 1. European Sanctions against Individuals: Classification and Origins. 2. The Legal Basis of Community Sanctions: Moving Competences from One Pillar to Another?. 3. The Right of Access to Justice. 4. Limits of Fundamental Rights in the Face of Terrorism. 5. Judicial Review of European Sanctions Giving Effect to UN Lists of Terrorist Suspects. 6. Protection from Autonomous European Sanctions: Community Law and Union Lists. 7. What are the Alternatives? Adoption and Review. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Belgium / Cyprus / Czech Republic / Denmark / United Kingdom / France / Germany / Israel / Poland / Switzerland LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Wales NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ICCPR; TEU; Lisbon treaty; TFEU; UDHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
|
46. | Katselli Proukaki, Elena : The problem of enforcement in international law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The problem of enforcement in international law : countermeasures, the non-injured state and the idea of international community / Katselli Proukaki, Elena - (Routledge research in international law), xxi, 331 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2010. ISBN 978-0-415-47832-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. The International Community, Jus Cogens Norms and Obligations Erga Omnes. 2. Community Interests in the Law on State Responsibility. 3. Countermeasures in the Name of Community Interests in State Practice. 4. Self-Contained Regimes, Solidarity Measures and the Fragmentation of International Law. 5. The Principle of Proportionality. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland / Afghanistan / Argentina / Australia / Burundi / Myanmar / Canada / Costa Rica / Cuba / Denmark / El Salvador / Ethiopia / Germany / Ghana / United Kingdom / Honduras / Hungary / India / Indonesia / Iran / Iraq / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Japan / Kenya / Kuwait / Lichtenstein / Namibia / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Norway / Pakistan / Philippines / Poland / Portugal / New Zealand / Rwanda / Saudi Arabia / Sierra Leone / South Africa / South Korea / USSR / Sri Lanka / Netherlands / Turkey / Uganda / USA / Venezuela / Viet Nam / Zaire / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aaland Islands NOTE (GENERAL): ToA; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; ECHR; Helsinki final act; ICCPR; ICESCR; Lomé convention; SEA; TEU; UDHR; UN charter;
URL http://www.routledge.com/books/The-Problem-of-Enforcement-in-International-Law-isbn9780415478328 |
|
47. | Evans, Malcolm (ed.) : International law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law / Evans, Malcolm (ed.). - 3. ed.., lxiv, 865 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-956566-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I : THE HISTORY AND THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 1: Stephen C Neff: A short history of international law. 2: Martti Koskenniemi: What is international law for?. 3: Iain Scobbie: Wicked heresies or legitimate perspectives? Theory and international law. PART II: THE STRUCTURE OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL OBLIGATION:. 4: Hugh Thirlway: The sources of international law. 5: Alan Boyle: Soft law in international law-making. 6: Dinah Shelton: International law and 'relative normality'. 7: Malgosia Fitzmaurice: The practical working of the law of treaties. PART III: THE SUBJECTS OF THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL ORDER:. 8: Matthew Craven: States and recognition in international law. 9: Dapo Akande: International organizations. 10: Robert McCorquodale: The individual and the international legal system. PART IV: THE SCOPE OF SOVEREIGNTY:. 11: Vaughan Lowe and Christopher Staker: Jurisdiction. 12: Hazel Fox: International law and restraints on the exercise of jurisdiction by national courts of states. 13: Chanaka Wickremasinghe: Immunities enjoyed by officials of states and international organizations. 14: Eileen Denza: The relationship between international and national law. PART V: RESPONSIBILITY:. 15: James Crawford and Simon Olleson: The nature and forms of international responsibility. 16: Phoebe Okowa: Issues of admissability and the law on international responsbility. 17: Spencer Zifcak: Responsibility to protect. PART VI: RESPONDING TO BREACHES OF INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS:. 18: Nigel White and Ademola Abass: Countermeasures and sanctions. 19: John Merrills: The means of dispute settlement. 20: Hugh Thirlway: The international court of justice. 21: Christine Gray: The use of force and the international legal order. PART VII: THE APPLICATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 22: Malcolm Evans: The law of the sea. 23: Catherine Redgwell: International environmental law. 24: Gerhard Loibl: International economic law. 25: Robert Cryer: International criminal law. 26: Henry Steiner: International protection of human rights. 27: David Turns: The law of war (international humanitarian law). INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Austria / Belgium / Belize / Canada / China / France / Germany / Greece / India / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Kenya / Malaysia / Malawi / Netherlands / New Zealand / Nigeria / Pakistan / Russian Federation / Senegal / Singapore / South Africa / Spain / Switzerland / United Kingdom / USA / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna convention on diplomatic relations; AMR; CEDAW; ICESCR; ECHR; ICCPR; CERD; Cartagena protocol; Genocide convention; Convention concerning the protection of the world cultural and natural heritage; CRC; CAT; Inter-American convention to prevent and punish torture; Convention on state immunity; ICESCR; Kyoto protocol; Rio declaration; ICC statute; PCIJ statute; Stockholm declaration; TEU; UN charter; Convention on the law of the sea; Declaration on friendly relations; |
|
48. | Crawford, James (ed.) : The law of international responsibility, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The law of international responsibility / Crawford, James (ed.) ; Pellet, Alain ; Olleson, Simon, lxv, 1296 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-19929697-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: Introduction - Responsibility and International Law:. 1: Alain Pellet: The Definition of Responsibility in International Law. 2: James Crawford: The System of International Responsibility. 3: Eric David: Primary and Secondary Rules. PART II: International Responsibility - Development and Relationship with Other Areas of Law:. SECTION 1: Development of the law of international responsibility:. A: Responsibility for internationally wrongful acts:. 4: Patrick Daillier: The Development of the Law of Responsibility in the Case Law. 5: Martti Koskenniemi: Doctrines of State Responsibility. B: The codification process:. 6: Lucie Laithier: Private Codification Efforts. 7: Clémentine Bories: The Hague Conference of 1930. 8: Daniel Müller: The Work of García-Amador on State Responsibility for Injury Caused to Aliens. 9: Alain Pellet: The ILC's Articles on State Responsibility. C: Liability in the abscence of an internationally wrongful act:. 10: Alan Boyle: Liability for Injurious Consequences of Acts Not Prohibited by International Law. SECTION 2: Responsibility and the legal system:. A responsibility and municipal law:. 11: Joe Verhoeven: The Law of Responsibility and the Law of Treaties. 12: Vera Gowlland-Debbas: Responsibility and the United Nations Charter. 13: Bruno Simma & Dirk Pulkowski: Leges speciales and Self-Contained Regimes. 14: Jean-Marc Sorel: The Emergence of "Soft" Responsibility. B: Responsibility and municipal law:. 15: Pierre-Marie Dupuy: Relations between the International Law of Responsibility and Responsibility in Municipal Law. PART III: The Sources of International Responsibility:. 16: Gilbert Guillaume: Overview of Part One of the Articles on State Responsibility. SECTION 1: The notion of an internationally wrongful act:. 17: Brigitte Stern: The Elements of an Internationally Wrongful Act. A: Attribution:. 18: Luigi Condorelli & Claus Kress: The Rules of Attribution: General Considerations. 19: Djamchid Momtaz, Gérard Cahin & Olivier de Frouville: Attribution of Conduct to the State. 20: Christian Domincé: Attribution of Conduct to Multiple States and the Implication of a State in the Act of Another State. 21: Václav Mikulka: State Succession and Responsibility. 22: Pierre Klein: Attribution of Conduct to International Organizations. 23: Christian Tomuschat, Gérard Cahin & Anna-Karin Lindblom: The Responsibility of Other Entities. B: Breach of an international obligation:. 24: Franck Latty: Actions and Omissions. 25: Yumi Nishimura: Source of the Obligation. 26: Constantin Economides: Content of the Obligation: Obligations of Means and Obligations of Result. 27: Jean Salmon: Duration of the Breach. 28: Paul Tavernier: Relevance of the Inter-temporal Law. C: Grave breaches of obligations owed to the international community as a whole:. 29: James Crawford: International Crimes of States. 30: Antonio Cassese: The Character of the Violated Obligation. 31: Paola Gaeta: The Character of the Breach. 32: Sandra Szurek: The Notion of Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness. D: Circumstances precluding wrongfulness:. 33: Affef Ben Mansour, Maja Ménard, Jean-Marc Thouvenin, Hubert Lesaffre, Sandra Szurek & Sarah Heathcote: Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness in the ILC Articles on State Responsibility. SECTION 2: Responsibility in the absence of an internationally wrongful act:. 34: Michel Montjoie: The Concept of Liability in the Absence of an Internationally Wrongful Act. 35: Philippe Guttinger: Allocation of Responsibility for Harmful Consequences of Acts not Prohibited by International Law. 36: Gerhard Hafner & Isabelle Buffard: Obligations of Prevention and the Precautionary Principle. PART IV : The Content of International Responsibility:. 37: Roslyn Higgins: Overview of Part Two of the Articles on State Responsibility. SECTION 1: The general regime of responsibility for internationally wrongful acts:. A: General principles:. 38: Olivier Corten: The Obligation of Cessation. 39: Sandrine Barbier: Assurances and Guarantees of Non-Repetition. 40: Brigitte Stern: The Obligation of Reparation. B: The modalities of reparation:. 41: Yann Kerbrat: Interaction Between the Forms of Reparation. 42: Christine Gray, John Barker, Elihu Lauterpacht, Eric Wyler & Alain Papaux: The Different Forms of Reparation. 43: Anaïs Moutier-Lopet: Contribution to the Injury. 44: Alexander Orakhelashvili: Division of Reparation between Responsible Entities. SECTION 2: Consequences of grave breaches of obligations owed to the international communitu as a whole:. 45: Stephan Wittich: Punitive Damages. 46: Martin Dawidowicz: The Obligation of Non-Recognition of an Unlawful Situation. 47: Nina Jørgensen: The Obligation of Non-Assistance of the Responsible State. 48: Nina Jørgensen: The Obligation of Cooperation. 49: Antoine Ollivier: International Criminal Responsibility of the State. 50: Rafaëlle Maison: The "Transparency" of the State. SECTION 3: Specific regimes of responsibility:. 51: Susan Marks, Fiorentina Azizi, Raphaële Rivier, Jean-Paul Costa & Habib Gherari: Responsibility for Violations of Human Rights Obligations. 52: Joanna Gomula: Responsibility and the World Trade Organization. 53: Céline Nègre: Responsibility and International Environmental Law. 54: Zachary Douglas, Daniel Müller & Drazen Petrovic: Other Specific Regimes of Responsibility. 55: Jean-Marc Thouvenin: Responsibility in the Context of European Community Law. SECTION 4: Regimes of responsibility inthe absence of an internationally wrongful act:. A: Reparation for harmful consequences of acts not internationally wrongful:. 56: Régis Chemain: The "Polluter Pays" Principle. 57: Mathias Forteau: Reparation in the Event of a Circumstance Precluding Wrongfulness. B: Treaty-based mechanisms:. 58: Gabriel Nakhleh & Mikael Quimbert: The Law of the Sea. 59: Mathias Forteau: Space Law. 60: Michel Montjoie: Nuclear Energy. PART V: The Implementation of International Responsibility:. 61: James Crawford: Overview of Part Three of the Articles on State Responsibility. SECTION 1: The injured party:. A: The state:. 62: Giorgio Gaja: The Concept of an Injured State. 63: Rosaria Huesa Vinaixa: Plurality of Injured States. 64: Giorgio Gaja: States having an Interest in Compliance with the Obligation Breached. 65: Václav Mikulka: Succession of States in respect of Rights of an Injured State. B: International organizations:. 66: Eglantine Cujo: Invocation of Responsibility by International Organizations. C. Other entities:. 67: Christian Tomuschat: Individuals. 68: Anne-Laure Vaurs-Chamette: Peoples and Minority Groups. 69: Vaughan Lowe: Corporations. 70: Anne-Laure Vaurs-Chamette: The International Community as a Whole. SECTION 2: Modalities for the implementation of international responsibility:. A: Conditions for claims:. 71: Jacqueline Peel: Notice of Claim by an Injured State. 72: Christian Tams: Waiver, Acquiescence and Extinctive Prescription. B: Diplomatic and functional protection:. 73: John Dugard: Diplomatic Protection. 74: Muriel Ubéda-Saillard & Myriam Benlolo-Carabot: Functional Protection. C: Procedures for the peaceful settlement of disputes:. 75: Michael Waibel: The Diplomatic Channel. 76: Nadine Susani: Conciliation and Other Forms of Non-Binding Third Party Dispute Settlement. 77: Frederique Coulée: Arbitration. 78: Gilles Cottereau: Resort to International Courts. SECTION 3: Countermeasures:. A: The object countermeasures:. 79: Denis Alland: The Definition of Countermeasures. 80: Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos: Countermeasures in Response to Grave Violations of Obligations owed to the International Community as a Whole. B: Conditions for recourse to countermeasures:. 81: Yuji Iwasawa & Naoki Itwatsuki: Procedural Conditions. 82: Roger O'Keefe: Proportionality. 83: Maurice Kamto: The Time Factor in the Application of Countermeasures. C: substantive limits on the recourse to countermeasures:. 84: Simon Olleson & Silvia Borelli: Obligations Relating to Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. 85: Charles Leben: Obligations Relating to the Use of Force and Deriving from Peremptory Norms of International Law. 86: Laurence Boisson de Chazournes: Other Non-Derogable Obligations The ILC Texts. Draft Articles on State Responsibility (as adopted on first reading), 1996. Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2001. Articles on Diplomatic Protection, 2006. Draft Articles on Responsibility of International Organizations (as adopted on first reading), 2009. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; UN charter; Aarhus convention; Geneva conventions; UN charter; ECHR; ICC statute; Kyoto protocol; ESC; Genocide convention; ICESCR; AMR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna conventions on diplomatic and consular relations; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
|
49. | Collins, Richard (ed.) : International organizations and the idea of autonomy, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International organizations and the idea of autonomy : institutional independence in the international legal order / Collins, Richard (ed.) ; White, Nigel D. - (Routledge research in international law), xviii, 445 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-55088-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Foreword, by José E. Alvarez. 1. International Organizations and the Idea of Autonomy: Introduction and Overview, by Richard Collins & Nigel D. White. PART ONE: Theoretical and Conceptual Frameworks:. 2. Modernist-Positivism and the Problem of Institutional Autonomy in International Law, by Richard Collins. 3. Legal Autonomy in Kant’s Philosophy of International Law, by Patrick Capps. 4. The Multifaceted Concept of the Autonomy of International Organizations and International Legal Discourse, by Jean d’Aspremont. 5. Policy Autonomy of Intergovernmental Organizations: A Challenge to International Relations Theory?, by Bob Reinalda & Bertjan Verbeek. 6. The Idea of Autonomy: Accountability, Self-Determinism and what Normative Claims about Institutional Autonomy in Global Governance Should Mean, by Garrett W. Brown. 7. Autonomy, Constitutionalism, and Virtue in International Institutional Law, by Jan Klabbers. PART TWO: Themes of Autonomy in Public International Law and International Institutional Law:. (a) Themes of Institutional Autonomy in International Law:. 8. The Emergence of International Agencies in the Global Administrative Space: Autonomous Actors or State Servants?, by Ramses A. Wessel & Edoardo Chiti. 9. International Adjudication and Autonomy, by John Merrills. 10. Sanctions and Countermeasures by International Organizations: Diverging Lessons for the Idea of Autonomy, by Frederic Dopagne. (b) Themes of Autonomy in International Institutional Law:. 11. The Relationship between International Legal Personality and Institutional Autonomy, by Tarcisio Gazzini. 12. Powers of Organizations and the Many Faces of Autonomy, by Viljam Engström. 13. Managerial Accountability: What Impact on International Organizations’ Autonomy?, by Jan Wouters, Nicholas Hachez & Pierre Schmidt. 14. Autonomy, Attribution and Accountability: Reflections on the Behrami Case, by Aurel Sari. 15. Immunity as a Guarantee for Institutional Autonomy: A Functional Perspective on the Necessity of UN Immunity in Post-conflict Administrations, by Eric De Brabandere. PART THREE: Autonomy within Particular Institutional Contexts:. 16. Layers of Autonomy in the UN System, by Nigel D. White. 17. Regional Organizations and the UN Legal Order: Interdependence of Independence?, by Richard Burchill. 18. Conceptualizing the Autonomy of the European Union, by Nicholas Tsagourias. 19. Institutional Balances, Competences and Restraints: the EU as an Autonomous Foreign Policy Actor, by Paul James Cardwell. 20. Autonomy in International Environmental Law and Governance - A Case Study of the Actual (Somewhere Between the Fable and the Threat), by Duncan French 21. Future Imperfect: Institutional Autonomy and the WTO, by Mary E. Footer. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; UN charter; ACHPR; Arab charter on human rights; ECHR; AMR; ICCPR; |
|
50. | Verdirame, Guglielmo : The UN and human rights, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The UN and human rights : who guards the guardians / Verdirame, Guglielmo - ( Cambridge studies in international and comparative law), lvi, 448 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-521-84190-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Introduction. 2. Concepts and definitions. 3. Human rights obligations of international organisations. 4. International institutional responsibility. 5. UN relief and development operations. 6. UN peacekeeping. 7. International administrations. 8. Implementation of UN sanctions. 9. Accountability. 10. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CAT; CEDAW; Genocide convention; Convention on the law of the sea; CRC; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Hague convention (IV); ICCPR; CERD; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Slavery convention; ICC statute; UDHR;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item6416884/?site_locale=en_GB |
|
51. | Constantinides, Aristotle (ed.) : The diversity of international law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The diversity of international law : essays in honour of Professor Kalliopi K. Koufa / Constantinides, Aristotle (ed.) ; Zaikos, Nikos, xliv, 674 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-18039-0 LANGUAGE: ENG, FRE ABSTRACT: PART ONE:CONSTITUTIONALIZING THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM:. 1. Observations sur la consolidation des valeurs communes en droit des gens contemporain / Christian Dominice´. 2. Les re`gles d'ordre public en droit international / Constantin P. Economide`s. 3. Constitutional problems of investor-state arbitration / Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann. PART TWO: ISSUES OF LAW-MAKING IN CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 4. Multiculturalism and contemporary international law and law-making / Edward McWhinney. 5. The Security Council as legislator / Tullio Treves. 6. The participation of NGOs in the international regulatory function / Maria Clelia Ciciriello. PART THREE: PROLIFERATION OF DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISMS:. 7. Issues concerning parallel proceedings in international dispute settlement / Francisco Orrego-Vicuna. 8. The creation of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea as a specialized court / Hugo Caminos. 9. Reflections on dispute settlement in the light of recent arbitrations involving Eritrea / John G. Merrills. PART FOUR: UPHOLDING THE RULE OF LAW WHILE COUNTERING TERRORISM:. 10. The protection of nationals abroad : Russia's use of force in Georgia / Christine Gray. 11. State sovereignty in times of terrorism / Rafael Nieto-Navia. 12. Causes worth fighting for : is there a non-state jus ad bellum? / Frederic Megret. 13. Security and human rights : balance or fear? / Pieter van Dijk. 14. Protecting human rights vis-a`-vis 'targeted' UN Security Council sanctions / Torsten Stein. 15. Targeted anti-terrorist sanctions and their implications for international law normative and institutional coherency / Pavel Sturma and Veronika Bilkova´. 16. International law, the sharia and international terrorism : a critical assessment of the role of Pakistan in the 'war on terror' / Javaid Rehman. PART SIX:INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES:. 17. Prohibited discrimination in international human rights law / Dinah Shelton. 18. Freedom of expression and the protection of private life in the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights : a field of tension / Christos Rozakis. 19. European human rights law and Turkey's violations in the occupied areas of Cyprus / Van Coufoudakis. 20. Beyond the duty to protect : expanding accountability and responsibilities of the state in combating human trafficking / Roza Pati. 21. The United Nations declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples / Siegfried Wiessner. 22. Indigenous peoples' rights to their natural resources / Erika-Irene Daes. PART SEVEN: HUMAN RIGHTS:DIVERSE CHALLENGES AHEAD:. 23. Inside/outside : women and the international human rights system / Hilary Charlesworth. 24. Harmonising the individual protection regime : some reflections on the relationship between human rights and international humanitarian law in the light of the right to life / Vera Gowlland-Debbas. 25. The viability of a convention for the protection of internally displaced persons / Fausto Pocar. 26. Les droits des victimes des actes terroristes / Emmanuel Decaux. 27. The United Nations and drug policy : towards a human rights-based approach / Damon Barrett and Manfred Nowak. PART EIGHT:DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW OF STATE RESPONSIBILITY:. 28. La protection diplomatique : du standard minimum de traitement des e´trangers aux droits de l'homme / Mohamed Bennouna. 29. State responsibility for international crimes : a review of principles of reparation / Andre´ Nollkaemper. 30. La legitime defense a-t-elle sa place dans un code sur la responsabilite´ internationale? / Theodore Christakis and Karine Bannelier. PART NINE: CONSOLIDATING INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW:. 31. Defining genocide / William Schabas. 32. Crimes against humanity in contemporary international law / Valentin Bou. 33. Restoring the rule of law : ending official elite impunity for international crimes / Jordan Paust. 34. L'exercice de la competence de la Cour penale internationale a'l'e´gard des crimes commis au Darfour / Djamchid Momtaz. PART TEN: INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE GLOBAL COMMONS:. 35. De la souverainete´ a` la coope´ration : l'e´mergence d'inte´re^ts collectifs / Umberto Leanza. 36. Interet collectif, lutte contre les changements climatiques et le défi de l'universalite´ / Laurence Boisson de Chazournes and Katerina Varfi. 37. The implications of the principle of sustainable development in international environmental law / Jose´ Juste-Ruiz. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ICESCR; ICC statute; ICCPR; UDHR; AMR; Framework convention on climate change; Kyoto protocol; Dayton peace agreement; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; UN trafficking protocol; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Johannes declaration of the world summit on sustainable development; |
|
52. | Crawford, James : State responsibility , 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph State responsibility : the general part / Crawford, James. - repr.. - ( Cambridge studies in international and comparative law), lxxiv, 825 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2014. ISBN 978-0-521-82266-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. PART I. The Framework of Responsibility:. 1. Historical development. 2. Key concepts. 3. Corollaries of breach of an international obligation. PART II. Attribution to the State:. 4. Organs and entities exercising governmental authority. 5. Direction and control by the State. 6. Other cases of attribution. PART III. Breach:. 7. Breach: the material element. 8. Breach: the temporal element. 9. Circumstances precluding wrongfulness. PART IV. Collective or Ancillary Responsibility:. 10. Responsibility in cases of joint or collective conduct. 11. Responsibility for breaches of communitarian norms. 12. Ancillary and secondary responsibility. 13. Succession to responsibility. PART V. Cessation and Reparation:. 14. Restoration of legal relations after breach. 15. Reparation. 16. Remedies. PART VI. The Implementation of Responsibility:. 17. The claims process. 18. Claims on behalf of others: diplomatic and functional protection. 19. Implementation of responsibility by judicial process. 20. Invocation in cases involving multiple parties. 21. Implementation of responsibility by extra-judicial process. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; UN charter; Genocide convention; ECHR; ILC articles on diplomatic protection; ILC articles on the responsibility of states for internationally wrongful acts; ICC statute; ICJ statute; UN convention on the law of the sea; Vienna convention on diplomatic relations; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
|
53. | Herik, Larissa van den (ed.) : Counter-terrorism strategies in a fragmented international legal order, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Counter-terrorism strategies in a fragmented international legal order : meeting the challenges / Herik, Larissa van den (ed.) ; Schrijver, Nico, xxxv, 760 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2013. ISBN 978-1-107-02538-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. Introduction: the fragmented international legal response to terrorism. PART I. Improving International Co-operation in the Investigation and Prosecution of Terrorist Acts:. 1. A snapshot of international criminal justice co-operation in the fight against terrorism since 9/11. 2. Terrorist crimes and the Aut Dedere Aut Judicare obligation. 3. The need for a multilateral co-operative framework for mutual legal assistance. 4. The role of regional organisations in promoting co-operation on counter-terrorism matters: the European and African institutions in a comparative perspective. 5. Lessons of the European Arrest Warrant. 6. Intelligent co-operation versus evidence collection and dissemination. 7. International co-operation in counteracting terrorist financing. 8. The international regulation of the use of force: the politics of interpretative method. PART II. The Use of Force against Terrorists:. 9. The role of the UN Security Council in relation to the use of force against terrorists. 10. Self-defence against terrorists: the meaning of armed attack. 11. Anticipatory self-defence against terrorists. 12. The necessity and proportionality of anti-terrorist self-defence. PART III. Intersection between International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law in the Fight against Terrorism:. 13. Armed conflict and terrorist organisations. 14. Extra-territorial application of the rights to life and personal liberty, including habeas corpus during situations of armed conflict. 15. Harmony or conflict? The interplay between human rights law and international humanitarian law in the fight against terrorism. 16. The legal regime governing treatment and procedural guarantees for persons detained in the fight against terrorism. 17. The legal regime governing the use of lethal force in the fight against terrorism. 18. The legal regime governing transfer of persons in the fight against terrorism. 19. Terrorism as a crime in international law and domestic law open issues. 20. All necessary measures? Reconciling international legal regimes governing peace and security and the protection of persons in the realm of counter-terrorism and international law. Appendix: Leiden Policy Recommendations on Counter-terrorism and International Law. INDEX WORDS:
|
|
54. | Ragazzi, Maurizio (ed.) : Responsibility of international organizations, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Responsibility of international organizations : essays in memory of Sir Ian Brownlie / Ragazzi, Maurizio (ed.), xlvi, 469 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2013. ISBN 978-90-04-25607-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART ONE - SETTING THE STAGE:. International Organizations’ Responsibility between Codification and Progressive Development. 1. Some Reflections on Basic Issues Concerning the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Antônio A. Cançado Trindade. 2. The Process of Law-Making: the Law Relating to International Organizations as an Example, by Kenneth Keith. 3. Codification, Progressive Development, or Scholarly Analysis? The Art of Packaging the ILC’s Work Product, by Sean D. Murphy. 4. International Organizations are Definitely Not States: Cursory Remarks on the ILC Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Alain Pellet. 5. ‘Weighing’ the Articles on Responsibility of International Organizations, by Michael Wood. PART TWO – ASSESSING THE COMMISSION’S APPROACH : State Responsibility and Respo nsibility of International Organizations:. (i) General Considerations:. 6. An Assessment of the ILC’s Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Ranjan Amerasinghe. 7. International Organizations and State Responsibility, by Dan Sarooshi. 8. Viability of the ILC’s Articles Formulated on the Basis of the Articles on State Responsibility, by Chusei Yamada. (ii) Comparing the Two Sets of Articles:. 9. Parallel Worlds, Parallel Clauses: Remarks on the Relationship between the Two Sets of ILC Articles on International Responsibility and the UN Charter, by Maurizio Arcari. 10. An Uneasy Transition? Linkages between the Law of State Responsibility and the Law Governing the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Vincent-Joel Proulx. 11. Within and Beyond Mutatis Mutandis, by Tullio Scovazzi. (iii) Lex Specialis/Rules of the Organization:. 12. The Role of Lex Specialis in the Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Kristen Boon. 13. Reflections on the Scope of Application of the Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Arnold N. Pronto. 14. Practice as a Relevant Factor for the Responsibility of International Organizations, by Emmanuel Roucounas. PART THREE - PARTICULAR PERSPECTIVES: (International Organizations and Other Entities):. (i) United Nations and Other International Organizations:. 15. Gian Luca Burci and Clemens Feinäugle : The ILC’s Articles Seen from a WHO Perspective. 16. José Manuel Cortés Martín: European Exceptionalism in International Law?. The European Union and the System of International Responsibility. 17. Daphna Shraga: ILC Articles on Responsibility of International Organizations: the Interplay between the Practice and the Rule (A View from the United Nations). (ii) International Financial Institutions:. 18. Laurence Boisson de Chazournes: United in Joy and Sorrow: Some Considerations on Responsibility Issues under Partnerships among International Financial Institutions. 19. Ross Leckow and Erik Plith: Codification, Progressive Development or Innovation? Some Reflections on the ILC Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations. 20. Maurizio Ragazzi: The World Bank and the ILC’s Project on the Responsibility of International Organizations. (iii) Other Entities:. 21. Robert Araujo: The Responsibility of International Organizations: Selected Reflections from the Perspective of a Former Legal Counsel to the Holy See. 22. John Dugard and Annemarieke: Vermeer-Künzli The Elusive Allocation of Responsibility to Informal Organizations: the Case of the Quartet on the Middle East. 23. Rutsel Silvestre J. Martha Attribution of Conduct after the Advisory Opinion on the Global Mechanism. PART FOUR - SPECIAL CONCERNS: (Selected Issues Regarding the Articles):. (i) Responsibility and Member States:. 24. Kazuhiro Nakatani: Responsibility of Member States towards Third Parties for an Internationally Wrongful Act of the Organization. 25. Paolo Palchetti: Exploring Alternative Routes: the Obligation of Members to Enable the Organization to Make Reparation. 26. Pavel Šturma: The Responsibility of International Organizations and their Member States. 27. Sienho Yee: ‘Member Responsibility’ for Acts of an Organization and the ILC Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations: Some Observations. (ii) Responsibility and the Courts/Countermeasures:. 28. Sergio Puig: Responsibility of International Organizations and Justiciability of Disputes. 29. Hugh Thirlway: Responsibility of International Organizations: What Role for the International Court of Justice?. 30. Antonios Tzanakopoulos: The Countermeasure of Disobedience: Implementing the Responsibility of International Organizations. 31. Simone Vezzani: Countermeasures by Member States against International Organizations. (iii) Use of Force/Peacekeeping Operations:. 32. Blanca Montejo: The Notion of ‘Effective Control’ under the Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations. 33. P.S. Rao: United Nations Responsibility from Authorizing the Use of Force. 34. Francesco Salerno: International Responsibility for the Conduct of ‘Blue Helmets’: Exploring the Organic Link. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Convention on the reduction of statelessness; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; TEU; Convention on the law of the sea; Vienna convention on law of the treaties; ICC statute;
URL http://www.brill.com/responsibility-international-organizations |
|
55. | Mälksoo, Lauri (ed.-in-chief) : Baltic yearbook of international law, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Baltic yearbook of international law : volume 14 : 2014 / Mälksoo, Lauri (ed.-in-chief) ; Ziemele, Ineta (ed.-in-chief) ; Zalimas, Dainius (ed.-in-chief), 331 p.. - Leiden : Brill, Nijhoff, 2015. ISBN 978-90-04-29112-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Michael N. Schmitt and M. Christopher Pitts: Cyber countermeasures and effects on third parties: the international legal regime. 2. Karine Bannelier-Christakis: Cyber diligence: a low-intensity due diligence principle for low-intensity cyber operations?. 3. Zhxiong Huang: The attribution rules in the ILC's articles on state responsibility: a preliminary assessment on their application to cyber operations. 4. Eduard Ivanov: Combating cyberterrorism under international law. 5. Eric Talbot Jensen: State obligations in cyber operations. 6. Andrey L. Kozik: The concept of sovereignty as a foundation for determining the legality of the conduct of states in cyberspace. 7. Nicholas Tsagourias: The law applicable to countermeasures against low-intensity cyber operations. 8. René Värk: Diplomatic and consular privileges and immunities in case of unfriendly cyber activities. 9. Sean Watts: Low-intensity cyber operations and the principle of non-intervention. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): Symposium "Low intensity cyber operations: the international legal regime", organized by the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence and the Faculty of Law of the University of Tarty, at the University of Tartu, 17-18 February 2014 LIBRARY LOCATION: S Baltic ... |
|
56. | Weller, Marc (ed.) : The Oxford handbook of the use of force in international law, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Oxford handbook of the use of force in international law / Weller, Marc (ed.) ; Solomou, Alexia (ed.) ; Rylatt, Jake William (ed.), 1280 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-19-967304-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Marc Weller: Introduction: international law and the problem of war. 1. Randall Lesaffer: Too much history: from war as sanction to the sanctioning of war. 2. Daniele Archibugi, Mariano Croce and Andrea Salvatore: Law of nations or perpetual peace? Two early international theories on the use of force. 3. Michael J. Glennon: The limitations of traditional rules and institutions relating to the use of force. 4. James Crawford and Rowan Nicholson: The continued relevance of established rules and institutions relating to the use of force. 5. Gina Heathcote: Feminist perspectives on the law on the use of force. 6. Jean d'Aspremont: The collective security system and the enforcement of international law. 7. Alexander Orakhelashvili: Changing jus cogens through state practice? The case of the prohibition of the use of force and its exceptions. 8. Ramesh Thakur: Reconfiguring the UN system of collective security. 9. Niels Blokker: Outsourcing the use of force: towards more Security Council control of authorized operations?. 10. Ian Johnstone: When the Security Council is divided: imprecise authorizations, implied mandates, and the 'unreasonable veto'. 11. Rob McLaughlin: United Nations Security Council practice in relation to use of force in no-fly zones and maritime exclusion zones. 12. Penelope Nevill: Military sanctions enforcement in the absence of express authorization?. 13. Nigel D. White: The relationship between the UN Security Council and General Assembly in matters of international peace and security. 14. Erika de Wet: Regional organizations and arrangements: authorization, ratification or independent action. 15. A. Mark Weisburd: Use of force: Justiciability and admissibility. 16. Scott Sheeran: The use of force in United Nations peacekeeping operations. 17. Haidi Willmot and Ralph Mamita: Mandated to protect: Security Council practice on the protection of civilians. 18. Nicholas Tsagourias: Self-defence, protection of humanitarian values, and the doctrine of impartialiaty and neutrality in enforcement mandates. 19. Charlotte Ku: Transparency, accountability, and responsibility for internationally mandated operations. 20. André Nollkaemper: 'Failures to protect' in international law. 21. Nico Schrijver: The ban on the use of force in the UN Charter. 22. Jan Klabbers: Intervention, armed intervention, armed attack, threat to peace, act of aggression, and the threat or use of force: what's the difference?. 23. Jean Michel Arrighi: The prohibition of the use of force and non-intervention: ambition and practice in the OAS region. 24. Sean D. Murphy: The crime of aggression at the International Criminal Court. 25. Claus Kress: The International Court of Justice and the 'principle of non-use of force'. 26. Vaios Koutroulis: The prohibition of the use of force in arbitrations and fact-finding reports. 27. Jörg Kammerhofer: The resilience of the restrictive rules on self-defence. 28. Sir Michael Wood: Self-defence and collective security: key distinctions. 29. Ashley S. Deeks: Taming the doctrine of pre-emption. 30. Kimberley N. Trapp: Can non-state actors mount an armed attack?. 31. Noam Lubell: The problem of imminence in an uncertain world. 32. Lidsay Moir: Action against host states of terrorist groups. 33. T. D. Gill: When does self-defence end?. 34. Jean-Christophe Martin: Theatre of operations. 35. Sir Nigel Rodley: 'Humanitarian intervention'. 36. David Wippman: Pro-democratic intervention. 37. Gregory H. Fox: Intervention by invitation. 38. Elizabeth Chadwick: National liberation in the context of post- and non-colonial struggles for self-determination. 39. Olivier Corten: Necessity. 40. Shane Darcy: Retaliation and reprisal. 41. William C. Gilmore: Hot pursuit. 42. Francois Dubuisson and Anne Lagerwall: The threat of the use of force and ultimata. 43. Wolff Heintschell von Heinegg: Blockades and interdictions. 44. Mathis Forteau: Rescuing nationals abroad. 45. Martin Wählisch: Peace settlements and the prohibition of the use of force. 46. Marina Mancini: The effects of a state of war or armed conflict. 47. Vasco Becker-Weinberg and Guglielmo Verdirame: Proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and shipping interdiction. 48. Daniel H. Joyner: The implications of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction for the prohibition of the use of force. 49. Douglas Guilfoyle: The use of force against pirates. 50. Marco Pertile: The changing environment and emerging resource conflicts. 51. Jordan J. Paust: Remotely piloted warfare as a challenge to the jus ad bellum. 52. Michael N. Schmitt: The use of cyber force and international law. 53. Ian M. Ralby: Private military companies and the jus ad bellum. 54. André de Hoogh: Jus cogens and the use of armed force. 55. Theodora Christodoulidou and Kalliopi Chainoglou: The principle of proportionality from a jus ad bellum perspective. 56. Keiichiro Okimoto: The relationship between jus ad bellum and jus in bello. 57. Paolo Palchetti: Consequences for third states as a result of an unlawful use of force. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
|
57. | Evans, Malcolm D. (ed.) : International law, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law / Evans, Malcolm D. (ed.). - 5th ed.., lxxiii, 896 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-879183-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Stephen C. Neff: A short history of international law. 2. Martti Koskenniemi: What is international law for?. 3. Iain Scobbie: A view from Delft: some thoughts about thinking about international law. 4. Anthea Roberts and Sandesh Sivakumaran: The theory and reality of the sources of international law. 5. Alan Boyle: Soft law in international law-making. 6. Malgosia Fitzmaurice: The practical working of the law of treaties. 7. Matthew Craven and Rose Parfitt: Statehood, self-determination, and recognition. 8. Dapo Akande: International organizations. 9. Robert McCorquodale: The individual and the international legal system. 10. Christopher Staker: Jurisdiction. 11. Philippa Webb: International law and restraints on the exercise of jurisdiction by national courts of states. 12. Chanaka Wickremasinghe: Immunities enjoyed by officials of states and international organizations. 13. Eileen Denza: The relationship between international and national law. 14. James Crawford and Simon Olleson: The character and forms of international responsibility. 15. Phoebe Okowa: Issues of admissibility and the law of international responsibility. 16. Spencer Zifcak: The responsibility to protect. 17. Nigel D. White and Ademola Abass: Countermeasrues and sanctions. 18. John Merrills: The means of dispute settlement. 19. Hugh Thirlway: The International Court of Justice. 20. Christine Gray: The use of force and the international legal order. 21. Sir Malcolm D. Evans: The law of the sea. 22. Catherine Redgwell: International environmental law. 23. Surya P. Subedi: International investment law. 24. Robert Cryer: International criminal law. 25. Sir Nigel Rodley: International human rights law. 26. Geoff Gilbert and Anna Magdalena Rüsch: International refugee and migration law. 27. David Turns: The law of armed conflict (international humanitarian law) INDEX WORDS:
|
|
58. | Closa, Carlos (ed.) : Reinforcing rule of law oversight in the European Union, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reinforcing rule of law oversight in the European Union / Closa, Carlos (ed.) ; Kochenov, Dimitry (ed.), xvi, 339 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1-107-51980-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Carlos Closa: Reinforcing EU monitoring of the rule of law: normative arguments, institutional proposals and the procedural limitations. 2. Gianluigi Palombella: Beyond legality - before democracy: rule of law caveats in the EU two-level system. 3. Christopher Hillion: Overseeing the rule of law in the EU: legal mandate and means. 4. Bojan Bugaric: Protecting democracy inside the EU: on Article 7 TEU and the Hungarian turn to authoritarianism. 5. Kim Lane Scheppele: Enforcing the basic principles of EU law through systemic infringement actions. 6. Ernst Hirsch Ballin: Mutual trust: the virtue of responsibility - strengthening the acceptance of the rule of law through peer review. 7. Gabriel N. Toggenburg and Jonas Grimheden: The rule of law and the role of fundamental rights: seven practical pointers. 8. Martin Scheinin: The potential of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights for the development of the rule of law indicators. 9. András Jakab: The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights as the most promising way of enforcing the rule of law against EU member states. 10. Jan-Werner Müller: Protecting the rule of law (and democracy!) in the EU: the idea of a Copenhagen Commission. 11. Kaarlo Tuori: From Copenhagen to Venice. 12. Paul Blokker: EU democratic oversight and domestic deviation from the rule of law: sociological reflections. 13. Milada Anna Vachudova: Why improve EU oversight of rule of law?: the two-headed problem of defending liberal democracy and fighting corruption. 14. Dimitry Kochenov: The missing EU rule of law?. J.H.H. Weiler: Epilogue: living in a glass house: Europe, democracy and the rule of law. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): TEU; EU charter of fundamental rights |