Legal Framework of Right of Self Defense in Cyber Warfare: Application through Laws of Armed Conflict
In: Journal of Development and Social Sciences (JDSS) 2022, ISSN:2709-6262 Vol. 3, No. 2 page [1076-1091]
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In: Journal of Development and Social Sciences (JDSS) 2022, ISSN:2709-6262 Vol. 3, No. 2 page [1076-1091]
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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 presenting the international law community with a call to action in defense of the liberal international order against a trend towards "authoritarian international law," Tom Ginsburg prompts us to assess the systemic dynamics at play in the contemporary international legal order.1 In doing so, we should be cautious about assuming that the consequences for international law of any particular actor will be positive or otherwise. A couple of decades ago even American international lawyers were concerned about what they perceived to be the threat posed to international law by the United States as global hegemon. And yet from today's vantage point, it seems that the imperial actor during the post-Cold War period may not have been the United States so much as transnational civil society. The very openness of the system of international law that enables both democratic and authoritarian regimes to promote norms reflective of their policy preferences has also enabled civil society to advance norms, processes, and institutional structures that go beyond the policy preferences of dominant states. In doing so, civil society—a hallmark of what we might refer to as the "pseudo-democratic" international legal system—has challenged the delicate balance between power politics and the realization of a pure international rule of law. The consequences appear serious.
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In: European Journal of International Law (Forthcoming)
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In: Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Introduction: the pursuit of legitimacy and military-society integration -- The Police Reserve Force and the U.S. Army -- Establishing the National Defense Academy and overcoming the past -- Becoming a "Beloved Self-Defense Force" in Hokkaido and beyond -- Public service/public relations during Anpo, the Olympics, and the Mishima Incident -- The return of the "Japanese Army" to Okinawa -- Epilogue: whither the SDF and the Cold War defense identity.
In: Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Introduction: the pursuit of legitimacy and military-society integration -- The Police Reserve Force and the U.S. Army -- Establishing the National Defense Academy and overcoming the past -- Becoming a "Beloved Self-Defense Force" in Hokkaido and beyond -- Public service/public relations during Anpo, the Olympics, and the Mishima Incident -- The return of the "Japanese Army" to Okinawa -- Epilogue: whither the SDF and the Cold War defense identity.
In: Hart Publishing, October 2014
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In: Social philosophy today: an annual journal from the North American Society for Social Philosophy, Band 20, S. 41-52
ISSN: 2153-9448
In: Law & Ethics of Human Rights, De Gruyter, Volume 7, Issue 2, 2013
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In: Critical concepts in law
International Law presents a comprehensive yet student-focused approach to the subject, providing a contemporary and stimulating account of international law. With critical coverage delivered through a wide range of learning features, students are encouraged to engage with legal debates and controversies. --
In: Pocketbooks of the Hague Academy of International Law
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: Veröffentlichungen des Walther-Schücking-Instituts für Internationales Recht an der Universität Kiel 160