Cases & Materials on International Law
Lýsing:
Cases & Materials on International Law is a topical and engaging companion for study, offering broad coverage on public international law and placing disputes directly within the context of contemporary debate. The book contains the essential cases and materials that students need in order to fully understand and analyse the international legal system, drawing on a truly global range of jurisdictions and sources.
Expert author commentary and notes place selected extracts within the wider legal framework and explain the complexities of the principles of law to students. The sixth edition includes expanded discussion of developing areas, including UN resolutions on climate change and international environmental law, new material from the International Law Commission, and coverage of major events, such as the annexation of Crimea, the legal context for Scottish independence and the UK's exit from the European Union, and the United Nations Security Council's Resolution on Malaysia Airlines MH17.
Annað
- Höfundar: Martin Dixon, Robert McCorquodale, Sarah Williams
- Útgáfa:6
- Útgáfudagur: 2016-10-21
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- Format:ePub
- ISBN 13: 9780192512789
- Print ISBN: 9780198727644
- ISBN 10: 0192512781
Efnisyfirlit
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Preface to Sixth Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Table of Statutes of the International Courts
- Table of the Rules of the International Courts
- Table of International Secondary Legislation
- Table of Treaties and Conventions
- Table of Other Documents
- 1 The Nature of the International Legal System
- Introductory note
- Section 1: The relevance of international law
- Section 2: The international community and international law
- Section 3: Theories of international law
- Section 4: The practice of international law
- 2 Sources of International Law
- Introductory note
- Section 1: The importance of sources
- Section 2: Statute of the International Court of Justice 1945
- Section 3: Treaties
- Section 4: Customary international law
- A: General considerations
- B: Local customary international law
- C: Persistent objector
- D: The relationship of customary international law and treaty law
- Section 5: General principles of law
- Section 6: Judicial decisions and the writings of publicists
- Section 7: Resolutions of international organisations
- Section 8: Soft law
- Section 9: A hierarchy of sources?
- Section 10: Codification and development of international law
- 3 The Law of Treaties
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Definition of a treaty
- A: General definition of a treaty
- B: Unilateral statements
- C: Nature of a treaty
- Section 2: Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969
- A: General principles
- B: Customary international law
- Section 3: Formation and application of treaties
- A: Formation
- B: Entry into force
- C: Pacta sunt servanda
- D: Impact of treaties on third States (non-parties)
- E State succession to treaties
- Section 4: Reservations to treaties
- A: General principles
- B: The legal effect of reservations
- C: Reservations to human rights treaties
- Section 5: Interpretation of treaties
- Section 6: Invalidity of treaties
- A: General principles
- B: Inconsistency with domestic law and coercion
- C: Error
- D: Jus cogens
- E: Unequal treaties
- F: Procedure for invoking the invalidity of a treaty
- Section 7: Termination of treaties
- 4 International Law and Domestic Law
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Theories
- Section 2: National law on the international plane
- Section 3: International law on the national plane
- Section 4: Examples of international law on the national plane
- A: United Kingdom
- B: Australia
- C: South Africa
- D: United States
- Introductory note
- Section 1: International legal personality
- A: Statehood
- B: Other territorial entities
- C: International organisations
- D: Individuals
- E: Other international persons
- Section 2: Recognition in international law
- A: General considerations
- B: Mandatory non-recognition in international law
- Section 3: Recognition in national law
- A: Recognition in UK law
- B: Recognition practice of other States
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Human rights theories
- Section 2: Human rights and the international community
- A: Universal obligations
- B: Cultural relativism
- Section 3: International protection of human rights
- A: International documents
- B: Procedure for protecting human rights
- C: Customary international law
- Section 4: Regional human rights protections
- Section 5: Limitations on the human rights treaty obligations of States
- A: General limitations
- B: Reservations
- C: Derogations
- Section 6: The right of self-determination
- A: International documents
- B: Clarification of the right of self-determination
- C: Application of the right of self-determination
- Section 7: Other human rights issues
- Section 8: Beyond the State
- A. Non-State actors
- B. International humanitarian and international human rights law
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Sovereignty and territory
- Section 2: Traditional means of acquisition of territory
- A: Occupation and prescription
- B: Cession
- C: Conquest
- Section 3: Effective occupation
- Section 4: Consent by other States
- A: Consent by the other party to the dispute
- B: Consent by other States
- C: Consent by the international community
- Section 5: Limitations on sovereignty over territory
- A: The right of self-determination
- B: Uti possidetis juris
- C: Indigenous people
- Section 6: Other territory
- A: The polar regions
- B: Deep seabed
- C: Airspace
- D: Outer space
- E: International territorial administration
- Introductory note
- Section 1: General principles of jurisdiction
- Section 2: Grounds for the assertion of jurisdiction by national courts
- A: Territorial
- B: Nationality
- C: Protective principle
- D: Passive personality
- E: The ‘effects’ doctrine
- F: Universality
- Section 3: State jurisdiction and persons apprehended in violation of international law
- Introductory note
- Section 1: General principles of State immunity in international law
- Section 2: State immunity in the United Kingdom
- A: General principles
- B: Commercial and other excluded transactions
- C: Who may claim immunity?
- Section 3: Heads of State and other holders of high-ranking office
- Section 4: The relationship between immunity and acts contrary to international law
- Section 5: The immunities of international organisations and their staff
- Section 6: Diplomatic and consular immunities
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Law of the Sea Convention 1982
- Section 2: The territorial sea and the contiguous zone
- A: Territorial sea
- B: The contiguous zone
- Section 3: The continental shelf
- A: General principles
- B: Delimitation of the shelf
- Section 4: The Exclusive Economic Zone
- A: General principles
- B: A common maritime boundary
- Section 5: The high seas
- Section 6: The deep seabed
- Section 7: Peaceful settlement of disputes
- Introductory note
- Section 1: The nature of State responsibility
- Section 2: Attribution
- A: Officials
- B: Private persons, corporations and other entities
- C: Armed non-State actors
- Section 3: Breach of an international obligation of the State
- A: International obligations
- B: Responsibility of a State in connection with an act of another State
- Section 4: Circumstances precluding wrongfulness (defences)
- Section 5: Consequences of a breach
- A: General
- B: Serious breach of a peremptory norm
- Section 6: Enforcement of a claim
- A: Ability to bring a claim
- B: Diplomatic protection: the nature of a state’s claim
- C: Diplomatic protection of natural persons: nationality of claims
- D: Diplomatic protection of legal persons: nationality of claims
- E: Exhaustion of local remedies
- F: Special enforcement regimes
- Section 7: Treatment of aliens
- Introductory note
- Section 1: The context
- A: Environmental context
- B: Legal context
- Section 2: Environmental theories
- Section 3: International obligations
- A: Sustainable development
- B: Prevention of transboundary pollution or environmental harm
- C: Precautionary principle
- D: Common but differentiated responsibility
- E: Reparation: polluter-pays principle
- F: State responsibility, compliance and enforcement
- Section 4: Selected environmental treaties
- A: Global treaties
- B: Protection of particular territory
- Section 5: Relationship of the environment with other international law issues
- A: Human rights and the environment
- B: Armed conflict and the environment
- C: Trade, finance and the environment
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Defining international economic law
- Section 2: Main international economic institutions
- Section 3: Key principles of international trade law
- A: Tariffication
- B: Binding of tariffs
- C: Most favoured nation treatment
- D: National treatment obligation
- E: Exceptions to the key principles of international trade law
- F: Anti-dumping and subsidies
- G: Regional trading arrangements
- H: Developing States in the WTO
- I: Dispute settlement within the WTO
- Section 4: Key principles of international investment law
- A: Foreign direct investment in international law
- B: Defining international investment
- C: Protection standards in international investment law
- D: Expropriation
- E: Dispute settlement in international investment law
- Section 5: The international financial architecture
- Section 6: International economic law and State sovereignty
- Section 7: Future directions
- Introductory note
- Section 1: Defining international criminal law
- Section 2: Sources of international criminal law
- Section 3: Substantive international crimes
- A: Genocide
- B: Crimes against humanity
- C: War crimes
- D: Aggression
- E: Other crimes: Terrorism and Torture
- Section 4: Prosecuting international crimes
- A: Modes of liability
- B: Command responsibility
- C: Defences
- D: Immunity
- Section 5: International criminal institutions
- A: Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals
- B: International ad hoc criminal tribunals
- C: The International Criminal Court
- D: Hybrid and internationalised tribunals
- Introductory note
- Section 1: The unilateral use of force
- A: The general scheme
- B: Individual self-defence
- C: Self-defence and terrorist attacks
- D: Collective self-defence
- E: The right to protect nationals abroad
- F: Humanitarian intervention
- G: Intervention by invitation of the territorial State
- H: Reprisals
- I: Self-determination
- Section 2: Collective security: use of force under Chapter VII of the UN Charter
- A: The Security Council
- B: The General Assembly
- C: Regional organisations
- Introductory note
- Section 1: General obligation on States
- Section 2: Non-judicial settlement procedures
- A: General procedures
- B: United Nations procedures
- Section 3: Arbitration
- Section 4: Specific international tribunals
- A: International criminal tribunals
- B: Human rights supervisory bodies
- C: International economic law
- D: Other specific international tribunals
- Section 5: International Court of Justice
- A: General
- B: Jurisdiction in contentious cases
- C: Absent third parties
- D: Provisional measures
- E: Intervention
- F: Interpretation and revision of judgments
- G: Obligations to comply with decisions
- H: Advisory opinions
- Section 6: International Court of Justice and the Security Council
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- Gerð : 208
- Höfundur : 15587
- Útgáfuár : 2016
- Leyfi : 379