This title examines the international lawfulness of state-sponsored targeted killings in military and police operations. Analyzing recent state practice and jurisprudence, it establishes when targeted killing may be considered lawful, and what legal restraints are imposed on the practice in times of war and peace
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Das Werk befasst sich mit dem noch jungen Phänomen des "Private Enforcement" von Kartellrecht, also kartellprivatrechtlicher Schadensersatzklagen. Gegenstand der Betrachtung sind neben Grundfragen des Verhältnisses von hoheitlicher und privater Rechtsdurchsetzung besonders augenfällige Konfliktfelder im Bereich des europäischen Zivilprozessrechts und kollektiver Rechtschutzinstrumentarien. Neben deren Darstellung erörtert der Tagungsband die bislang anzutreffenden Regulierungsansätze auf europäischer Ebene und innerhalb ausgewählter Mitgliedstaaten. Beachtung findet zudem die Wirkung der immer häufiger zu beobachtenden Gerichtsstandsvereinbarungen auf grenzüberschreitende Kartellprozesse. Weitere Einzelfragen wie die Problematik des Gesamtschuldnerausgleichs runden die Untersuchung ab.Mit Beiträgen von:Prof. Dr. Matthias Weller, Prof. Dr. Michael Nietsch, Prof. Dr. Burkhard Hess, Dr. Ulrich Börger, Dr. Carsten Krüger, Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Wurmnest
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Trade and economic policy -- The modern trade debate among economists -- The making and impact of trade agreements in national legal systems -- The WTO : history, structure, and future -- WTO dispute settlement -- Special topics in WTO dispute settlement -- Tariffs -- Quantitative restrictions -- National treatments : internal taxation -- National treatments : internal regulations -- Most-favored-nation treatment -- Preferential trade agreements -- General exceptions : GATT Article XX -- General exceptions : the chapeau of GATT Article XX -- Dumping and anti-dumping --Subsidies and countervailing duties-- Safeguards -- Agreement on sanitary and phytosanitary measures -- Agreement on technical barriers to trade -- Trade in services -- Trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights -- The WTO and developing countries
History of European integration -- The institutional framework -- The making of Community law -- The effect of Community law -- Judicial control within the Community -- Protecting fundamental rights within the Community -- The free movement of goods -- The free movement of persons -- EC competition law -- Selected Community policies -- The EC and the EU as international actors.
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Title from cover. ; Index to government periodicals. ; Index to legal periodicals. ; Vol. 38 lacks chronological designation. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Vols. for 1985 issued by: the Office of the Judge Advocate General, Dept. of the Navy; 1986- by: the Naval Justice School, Newport, R.I.
Title from cover. ; Vol. 38 lacks chronological designation. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Vols. for 1985 issued by: the Office of the Judge Advocate General, Dept. of the Navy; 1986- by: the Naval Justice School, Newport, R.I.
Published: Charlottesville, Va. : Judge Advocate General's School, Some v. distributed to depository libraries, ending with Title from cover. ; Issues prior to v. 76, spring 1977 were sent to depository libraries as Item no. 327 (Rev. 1969). ; Issues for Sept. 1958- are unnumbered but constitute v. 1- Mode of access: Internet. ; Edited by the Judge Advocate General's School, Charlottesville, Va. ; Indices: no. 1-22, 1963.
Published: Charlottesville, Va. : Judge Advocate General's School, Title from cover. ; Index to U.S. government periodicals ; Public Affairs Information Service bulletin ; ABC pol sci ; Legal resource index ; Index to legal periodicals ; Issues prior to v. 76, spring 1977 were sent to depository libraries as Item no. 327 (Rev. 1969) ; Issues for Sept. 1958- are unnumbered but constitute v. 1- Mode of access: Internet. ; Edited by the Judge Advocate General's School, Charlottesville, Va. ; [Vol. 1]-22, 1958-1963 in no. 22.
Public law notions seen from shari'a law perspective have not been duly discussed in Islamic countries. In the discourse of rule of law in Islam we are confronted with a dilemma, moral values of a religion are not compatible with the coercive legislative measures. Thus the authentic application of shari'a rules is feasible only if a scientific hermeneutic of shari'a law is adapted to the exigencies of today's modern life, while the outlook on the boundaries of hermeneutic remains obscure. The first section of this article, introductory discourse, scrutinizes the fallacy of different theories on the notion of justice leading to the concept of "rule of law" in general. The second section focuses on the rule of law in Islam. Concluding ideas are presented in the final section, conclusion.
Abstract This article offers a critique of injustices in European private law. It explains why the EU should be held morally responsible for the injustices created or supported by its private law. In particular, it demonstrates for several core elements of EU private law that they are unjust, because they cannot be justified with non-rejectable reasons, and insofar lead to domination by EU private law. This is the case, especially, for EU private law's consumerism, its Eurocentrism, its constitutionalized market-functionalism, its doctrinal and judicial expert government, and its blindness towards intersectional domination. The article also critically discusses, and rejects, various theories offering blueprints for an ideal European private law system. Instead, it argues for the priority of democratic justice and for an urgent focus on salient injustices in EU private law's theory and practice.