DECISIONS OF INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS: INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 57, Heft 1, S. 219-224
ISSN: 1471-6895
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In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 57, Heft 1, S. 219-224
ISSN: 1471-6895
In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 55, Heft 3, S. 742-753
ISSN: 1471-6895
The author provides an analysis of the United State's unilateral & hegemonic approach to foreign policy regarding Iraq in the context of the challenges it poses to the multilateral legal order constructed over the past decades. Despite the US invasion of Iraq, the author offers reasons why multilateralism may yet survive. D. Miller
In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 50, Heft 4, S. 992-993
ISSN: 1471-6895
In: The Reality of International LawEssays in Honour of Ian Brownlie, S. 389-412
Environmental justice in situations of armed conflict / Phoebe Okowa -- Sovereignty and environmental justice in international law / André Nollkaemper -- Piercing the state veil in the pursuit of environmental justice / Jonas Ebbesson -- Competing narratives of justice in North-South environmental relations : the case of ozone layer depletion / Karin Mickelson -- Climate change, global environmental justice and international environmental law / Jutta Brunnée -- Justice in global environmental negotiations : the case of desertification / Bo Kjellén -- Distributive justice and procedural fairness in global water law / Ellen Hey -- Environmental justice in the use, knowledge, and exploitation of genetic resources / Philippe Cullet -- Law, gender, and environmental resources : women's access to environmental justice in East Africa / Patricia Kameri-Mbote -- The polluter pays principle : dilemmas of justice in national and international contexts / Hans Christian Bugge -- Corporate activities and environmental justice : perspectives on Sierra Leone's mining / Priscilla Schwartz -- Environmental justice and international trade law / Nicolas de Sadeleer.
In: Oxford monographs in international law
In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 688-697
ISSN: 1471-6895
The dispute between Hungary and Slovakia concerning the Gabcïkovo-Nagymaros project could easily be described as one of the most important cases to come before the International Court of Justice ("the Court") in recent years. The case raised a number of very important questions of international law, many of which had received no previous consideration in the Court's jurisprudence. In the first place, the Court was asked by both parties for orders of specific performance. Although the competence of the Court to issue orders of specific performance or injunctive relief had been the subject matter of much discussion in the academic literature, the issue had never before been raised squarely before the Court. Second, this was the first dispute in which the Court was directly asked to consider the consequences of the legal developments in the field of environmental protection. Despite the proliferation of treaty developments in that field, the status of many of those norms remains problematic Third, although the relationship between the law of treaties and the law of State responsibility has generated much general interest, the Court had not in the past been presented with an opportunity to pronounce on some of these issues. Finally, this is also one of the few cases in which the Court has been asked to consider the legal implications of State succession outside the context of decolonisation.