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In: Toronto studies in philosophy
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Working paper
In: 'Judge and Jurist: Essays in Memory of Lord Rodger of Earlsferry' (OUP, 2013) eds Andrew Burrows, David Johnston, and Reinhard Zimmermann chapter 41
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Very little has been written on charitable laws in Fiji to date. Most of the organisations in Fiji seek incorporation under the pre-independence legislation dealing with charities, the Charitable Trusts Act (Cap 67). This Act is the basis of this paper. The key provisions of the Act are discussed in this paper. Recently serious questions have been raised on the status of charitable bodies with the de-registration of one of the registered charities (the Citizens' Constitutional Forum (CCF)) for political activity. This paper also provides an insight into the CCF 'saga', which goes to the 'heart' of the Act and examines the serious questions that are raised in interpreting the provisions in the Act. In the concluding part, various issues of reform in the charity sphere are also proposed.
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In: The Indian journal of public administration: quarterly journal of the Indian Institute of Public Administration, Volume 31, Issue 3, p. 424
ISSN: 0019-5561
In: Routledge handbooks
This Handbook of International Organization brings together scholars whose essays discuss significant issues with regard to international organization as process and international organizations as institutions. Although the focus is on intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental organizations are discussed where relevant. The handbook is divided into six parts: . Documentation, data sets and sources . International secretariats as bureaucracies . Actors within international bureaucracies . Processes within international bureaucracies . Challenges to international organizations, and . Expanding international architecture.
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Volume 63, Issue 2, p. 224-236
ISSN: 2161-7953
It has been assumed in international adjudication that each state in the litigation should be permitted to have a judge of its own nationality on the bench. This practice of employing national judges in international courts is deeply rooted in the history of arbitration and judicial settlement. Responding to a demand for it, the Committee of Jurists in 1920–1921 embodied the plan in Article 31 of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice. This article was transferred intact to the Statute of the present International Court of Justice in 1945. Whether judges of the nationality of the parties, either in arbitration tribunals or in courts of justice, can be counted upon to be as "independent" as the processes of justice require, and as Article 2 of the present Statute stipulates, is a question of some moment to present-day international justice. It has been suggested as an alternative that a judge on the International Court of the nationality of the litigant should abstain; thus a state with no judge of its nationality on the Court would not be at a disadvantage.
In: Society of International Economic Law (SIEL), Second Biennial Global Conference, University of Barcelona, July 8-10, 2010
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In: International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Volume 58
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In: Law and philosophy library 86