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International taxation of banking
In: Series on international taxation volume 75
International Taxation of Banking' introduces and analyses the international tax issues which relate to international banking activities. Banking is an increasingly global business, with a complex network of international transactions within multinational groups and with international customers. This book provides a thorough, practical analysis of international taxation issues as they affect the banking industry, and it includes the structures used in bank treasury operations and transfer pricing issues for multinational banking groups
Vestnik meždunarodnych organizacij: obrazovanie, nauka, novaja ėkonomika = International organisations research journal
Localizing International Law
In: Human Society and International Law: Reflections on the Present and Future of International Law, Carlo Focarelli ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2023
SSRN
Gewerkschaften im internationalen Qualifikationswettlauf
In: Gewerkschaftliche Monatshefte, Band 52, Heft 6, S. 356-365
ISSN: 0016-9447
World Affairs Online
Due diligence in international law
In: Queen Mary studies in international law, volume 26
Due Diligence in International Law identifies due diligence as the missing link between state responsibility and international liability. Acknowledged in all legal fields, it ensures international peaceful cooperation and prevents significant transboundary harm, yet it has thus far not been comprehensively discussed in literature. The present volume fills this void. Kulesza identifies due diligence as a principle of international law and traces its evolution throughout centuries. The no-harm principle, key to identifying responsibility for transboundary harm, focal to international environmental law and applicable to e.g. combating terrorism, follows states' obligation of due diligence in preventing foreign harm. This obligation, present in various treaty-based and customary regimes is argued to be a principle of international public law applicable to all obligations of conduct.
CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM
As a starting point, for terrorism and organized crime, we can emphasize that with the birth of human society, crimes and deviations in general have arisen, while from the moment the crimes became economic and beneficial interests both materially and in power, they made organized crime to take on greater proportions, especially since the end of this century, it has been turned into terrorist influence. In the following pages, we will mention only some of the causes and appearances of terror around the world. If we start talking about this problem we have to dwell in some short passages while mentioning some of the appearances of international terrorism.Keywords: Terrorism, politics, media, modernism, violence.
BASE
Financing international trade
International Conflict Resolution
In: Westview special studies in peace, conflict, and conflict resolution
This book presents papers on different perspectives in tackling the economic, racial and other injustices which generate conflict. The papers infer that the nuclear threat provides the most urgent manifestation of the inadequacy of war as a means of resolving differences between nations.
International Arms Transfers
In: SIPRI yearbook: armaments, disarmament and international security
ISSN: 0953-0282, 0579-5508, 0347-2205
There has been an almost 50% increase in the volume of major conventional arms transfers over the past four years, reversing a downward trend after 1997. The USA and Russia were the largest suppliers in the five-year period 2002-2006, each accounting for around 30% of global deliveries. Exports from European Union (EU) members to non-EU countries accounted for just over 20% of global deliveries. Because of its very limited internal market, the Russian arms industry remains heavily dependent on exports -- most newly produced weapons in Russia are exported -- to maintain an arms industry and fund development of new weapons and technology. This limits the possibility that Russia will exercise restraint in its arms exports. The arms industries of the USA and EU members are in general far less export dependent. China and India remained the largest arms importers in the world. Also among the top 10 importers were five Middle Eastern countries. While much media attention was given to arms deliveries to Iran, mainly from Russia, deliveries from the USA and European countries to Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were significantly larger. Especially worrisome are deliveries of long-range conventional strike systems to these states and the effects this may have on regional stability. Because the development of large weapon systems is becoming increasingly costly, nearly all countries have become or soon will become dependent on other countries for weapons or weapon technology. This could lead to mutual dependency -- as in US-Europe relations -- or to one-sided dependency, as is the case for most developing countries. Some countries may be unwilling to accept dependency or be unable to access arms and technology. They may try, at high economic cost, to become autonomous in arms production or may focus on relatively cheap alternative weapons such as weapons of mass destruction, or war-fighting strategies such as terrorism and IT warfare. The problem of controlling state supplies of weapons to rebel groups, while not new, was highlighted in 2006 by the arsenal acquired by Hezbollah from Iran and used in its war with Israel, and by serious breaches by state actors of the UN arms embargo on Somalia. Transparency in arms transfers, which in the 1990s saw significant improvement, with more and better national export reports, has remained stagnant in the past few years. Adapted from the source document.
Internationale Ausbreitung von Sportarten
In: Sportökonomie in Forschung und Praxis Band 17
SSRN
Openness in International Adoption
In: Columbia Human Rights Law Review, Band 46
SSRN