Self determination, territorial disputes and international law: An analysis of UN and state practice
In: Geopolitics and international boundaries, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 15-54
2719664 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Geopolitics and international boundaries, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 15-54
In: Hart Publishing, October 2014
SSRN
In: International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 56 3: 623-639, 2007
SSRN
SSRN
In: Aspen casebook series
The idea of international criminal law -- International law preliminaries -- International criminal tribunals: from Nuremberg to the Hague and and beyond -- Comparative criminal procedure and sentencing -- Jurisdiction -- Immunities -- U.S. constitutional rights in a transnational context -- Obtaining evidence abroad -- International extradition and its alternatives -- Organized crime -- Trafficking in persons, drugs, arms and antiquities -- Money laundering -- Corruption -- Terrorism -- The international criminal court -- Modes of participation and mens rea -- Defenses to international criminal prosecutions -- Crimes against humanity -- Genocide -- War crimes and the crime of aggression -- Torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment or punishment -- Sexual violence -- Alternatives to prosecution after atrocity: a survey of other transitional justice mechanisms
In: Österreichische militärische Zeitschrift: ÖMZ, Band 39, Heft 5, S. 660-662
ISSN: 0048-1440
In: The international law of peace and security
part Part I Ancient-Medieval -- chapter 1 Victor Alonso (2007), ' War, Peace, and International Law in Ancient Greece', in K.A. Raaflaub (ed.), War and Peace in the Ancient World, New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 206-25 -- chapter 2 Joachim von Elbe (1939), 'The Evolution of the Concept of the Just War in International Law', American Journal of International Law, 33, pp. 665-88 -- chapter 3 Bassam Tibi (1996), 'War and Peace in Islam', in T. Nardin (ed.), The Ethics of War and Peace, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, pp. 128-45 -- part Part II League of Nations Era -- chapter 4J.L. Brierly (1930-32), 'International Law and Resort to Armed Force', Cambridge Law Journal, 4, pp. 308-19 -- chapter 5 Arnold D. McNair (1936), 'Collective Security', British Yearbook of International Law, 17, pp. 150-64 -- part Part III United Nations Era -- chapter 6 Hans Kelsen (1948), 'Collective Security and Collective Self-Defense under the Charter of the United Nations', American Journal of International Law, 42, pp. 783-96 -- chapter 7 Josef L. Kunz (1951), 'Bellum Justum and Bellum Legale', American Journal of International Law, 45, pp. 528-34 -- chapter 8 Thomas M. Franck (1970), 'Who Killed Art. 2(4)? Or: Changing Norms Governing the Use of Force by States', American Journal of International Law, 64, pp. 809-37 -- chapter 9 Louis Henkin (1971), 'The Reports of the Death of Article 2(4) Are Greatly Exaggerated', American Journal of International Law, 65, pp. 544-48 -- chapter 10 Oscar Schachter (1986), 'In Defense of International Rules on the Use of Force', University of Chicago Law Review, 53, pp. 113-46 -- chapter 11 Jean Combacau (1986), 'The Exception of Self-Defence in U.N. Practice', in A. Cassese (ed.), The Current Legal Regulation of the Use of Force, Boston, MA: M. Nijhoff, pp. 9-38 -- chapter 12 derek Bowett (1972), 'Reprisals Involving Recourse to Armed Force', American Journal of International Law, 66, pp. 1-36 -- chapter 13 Roberto Barsotti (1986), 'Armed Reprisals', in A. Cassese (ed.), The Current Legal Regulation of the Use of Force, Boston, MA: M. Nijhoff, pp. 79-110 -- part Part IV Terrorism, Weapons of Mass Destruction and Information Warfare -- chapter 14 Abraham D. Sofaer (2003), 'On the Necessity of Pre-emption', European Journal of International Law, 14, pp. 209-26 -- chapter 15 Christopher Greenwood (2003), 'International Law and the Pre-emptive Use of Force: Afghanistan, Al-Qaida, and Iraq', San Diego International Law Journal, 4, pp. 7-37 -- chapter 16 Christian J. Tams (2009), 'The Use of Force against Terrorists', European Journal of International Law, 20, pp. 359-97 -- chapter 17 Michael N. Schmitt (1998-99), 'Computer Network Attack and the Use of Force in International Law: Thoughts on a Normative Framework', Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, 37, pp. 885-937 -- chapter 18 Christopher C. Joyner and Catherine Lotrionte (2001), 'Information Warfare as International Coercion: Elements of a Legal framework', European Journal of International Law, 12, pp. 825-65 -- part Part V Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect -- chapter 19 Jean-Pierre L. Fonteyne (1973-74), 'The Customary International Law Doctrine of Humanitarian Intervention: Its Current Validity under the U.N. Charter', California Western International Law Journal, 4, pp. 203-70 -- chapter 20 Terry D. Gill (2004), 'Humanitarian Intervention: Legality, Justice and Legitimacy', Global Community, 4, pp. 51-75 -- chapter 21 Spencer Zifcak (2009), 'The Responsibility to Protect', in United Nations Reform: Heading North or South?, London: Routledge, pp. 105-27, 200 -- chapter 22 Carlo Focarelli (2008), 'The Responsibility to Protect Doctrine and Humanitarian Intervention: Too Many Ambiguities for a Working Doctrine', Journal of Conflict and Security Law, 13, pp. 191-213.
In: Developments in International Law 74
In: International Law E-Books Online, Collection 2020, ISBN: 9789004419070
Introduction : non-state actors, changing actors, and subjects of international law / Charles-Emmanuel Côté -- Sovereignty's accommodations : quasi-states as international lawmakers / Kathleen Claussen -- Quasi-States and sport : building a case for statehood / Ryan Gauthier -- Self-determination claimant groups and the creation of international norms / Amy Maguire -- Indigenous peoples as actors in international law-making : focusing on international environmental law / Yuko Osakada -- Legally sculpting a melting arctic : states, indigenous peoples and justice in multilateralism / Sabaa Ahmad Khan -- Legitimacy, participation, and international law-making : 'fixing' the restitution of cultural property to indigenous peoples / Shea Elizabeth Esterling -- Procedural barriers to indigenous peoples' participation in international lawmaking : extended continental shelf delimitation in Inuit Nunaat / Zhannah Voukitchevitch -- Non-state actors as invisible law makers? Domestic Implementation of Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Standards / Mari Takeuchi -- Reorienting the role of nonstate actors in global climate governance / Jason MacLean -- The influence of the individual and the corporation on the state's exercise of jurisdiction under international law : the case of business and human rights arbitration / Sarah Castles -- Beyond the state : individual civil responsibility for violations of international law / Miriam Cohen -- Asymmetrical legal conflicts / Shiri Krebs -- Reconsidering the classification of extraterritorial conflict with armed groups in international humanitarian law / Shin Kawagishi -- The status of rebels in non-international armed conflict : do they have the right to life? / Kentaro Wani -- Non-state actors in international dispute settlement : the case of domestic investment statutes / Jarrod Hepburn.
In: International studies perspectives: a journal of the International Studies Association, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 163-185
ISSN: 1528-3577
World Affairs Online
In: FICHL publication series no. 25
Ensuring accountability for core international crimes in armed forces : obligations and self-interest / by Morten Bergsmo and SONG Tianying -- Military justice and self-interest in accountability / by Arne Willy Dahl -- Ownership of international humanitarian law / by Richard J. Goldstone -- The international humanitarian law implementation paradigm and the idea of military self-interest in accountability / by SONG Tianying -- Accountability in the 19th-century US Army / by Elizabeth L. Hillman -- The self-interest of armed forces in accountability for their members for core international crimes : carrot is better than stick / by Bruce Houlder -- Contextual analysis of accountability for core international crimes : a perspective from the Indonesian armed forces / by Agus Widjojo -- Compliance with the law of armed conflict : an Israeli perspective / by Marlene Mazel -- The impact of religion on military self-interest in accountability : an Islamic sharīʹah perspective / by Adel Maged -- The interest of states in accountability for sexual violence in armed conflicts : a case study of comfort women of the Second World War / by Kiki Anastasia Japutra -- If you're not at the table, you're on the menu : complementarity and self-interest in domestic processes for core international crimes / by Christopher Mahony -- Self-interest or self-inflicted? How the United States charges its service members for violating the laws of war / by Christopher Jenks -- Awakening self-interest : American military justice in Afghanistan and Iraq / by Franklin D. Rosenblatt -- Prosecuting members of the armed forces for core international crimes : a judicial act in the self-interest of the armed forces? / by Roberta Arnold -- Troop discipline, the rule of law and mission operational effectiveness in conflict-affected states / by Róisín Burke -- Military or civilian jurisdiction for international crimes? An approach from self-interest in accountability of armed forces in international law / by Elizabeth Santalla Vargas
In: European Journal of International Law (Forthcoming)
SSRN
In: Journal of conflict & security law, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 95-126
ISSN: 1467-7962
In: Nations and nationalism: journal of the Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 480-481
ISSN: 1354-5078
In: Law & Ethics of Human Rights, De Gruyter, Volume 7, Issue 2, 2013
SSRN