Necessity and Proportionality in International Peace and Security Law
Herausgeber: Kreß, Claus; Lawless, Robert
Necessity and Proportionality in International Peace and Security Law
Herausgeber: Kreß, Claus; Lawless, Robert
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There are legal limits on the circumstances under which states may use military force to address a perceived or actual threat. The concepts of necessity and proportionality are central to these limitations imposed by the law. Necessity and Proportionality in International Peace and Security Law explores the many ways in which necessity and proportionality arise in the law on the modern battlefield, which is rapidly changing, complex, and ambiguous.
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There are legal limits on the circumstances under which states may use military force to address a perceived or actual threat. The concepts of necessity and proportionality are central to these limitations imposed by the law. Necessity and Proportionality in International Peace and Security Law explores the many ways in which necessity and proportionality arise in the law on the modern battlefield, which is rapidly changing, complex, and ambiguous.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 526
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 953g
- ISBN-13: 9780197537374
- ISBN-10: 0197537375
- Artikelnr.: 59551567
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 526
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 953g
- ISBN-13: 9780197537374
- ISBN-10: 0197537375
- Artikelnr.: 59551567
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Claus Kreß is a Professor of International Law and Criminal Law. He holds the Chair for German and International Criminal Law and is the Director of the Institute of International Peace and Security Law at the University of Cologne. His prior practice was in the German Federal Ministry of Justice on matters of criminal law and international law. In addition to his scholarly work, comprising more than 150 publications on the law on the use of force, the law of armed conflicts and international criminal law, he has been a member of Germany's delegations in the negotiations regarding the International Criminal Court since 1998. He is a Life Member of Clare Hall College at the University of Cambridge, a Member of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Northrhine-Westfalia, and the recipient of the 2014 M.C. Bassiouni Justice Award. He holds honorary doctorates from the State University Tbilisi and the University of Huánuco. Robert Lawless is a Judge Advocate in the United States Army Judge Advocate General's Corps. He has been assigned as both a prosecutor and defense counsel, litigating military justice cases in courts-martial. He also served as an administrative and operational law attorney for the Third Infantry Division during Operation Resolute Support in Afghanistan. His assignments also include serving as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Law at the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York.
* Foreword
* Brigadier General Joseph B. Berger III
* Introduction
* Claus Kreß
* PART ONE: An Encounter of International Law with Morality
* 1. Necessity and Proportionality in Morality and Law
* Jeff McMahan
* PART TWO: Considerations of Overarching Significance
* 2. On the Continuous and Concurrent Application of ad Bellum and in
Bello Proportionality
* Eliav Lieblich
* PART THREE: The International Law Governing the Use of Force
* 3. The Essential Link Between Proportionality and Necessity in the
Exercise of Self-Defense
* Geoffrey S. Corn
* 4. The Unwilling and Unable Test for Extraterritorial Defensive
Force: Why Force Is Permitted Against the Territorial State
* Jens David Ohlin
* 5. Drones Programs, the Individualization of War, and the ad Bellum
Principle of Proportionality
* Rebecca Mignot-Mahdavi
* 6. The Quest for an Internal Jus ad Bellum: International Law's
Missing Link, Mere Distraction, or Pandora's Box?
* Tom Ruys
* 7. Article 51's Reporting Requirement as a Space for Legal Argument
and Factfulness
* Larissa van den Herik
* PART FOUR: The International Law of Armed Conflicts
* 8. Sequences in Military Necessity for the Jus in Bello
* Dino Kritsiotis
* 9. Practical and Conceptual Challenges to Doctrinal Military
Necessity
* Robert Lawless
* 10. Considerations of Necessity Under Article 57(2)(a)(ii), (c), and
(3) and Proportionality Under Article 51(5)(b) and Article 57(2)(b)
of Additional Protocol I: Is There Room for an Integrated Approach?
* Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg
* 11. Specifying the Proportionality Test and the Standard of Due
Precaution: Problems of Prognostic Assessment in Determining the
Meaning of "May Be Expected" and "Anticipated"
* Stefan Oeter
* 12. The Proportionality Rule and Mental Health Harm in War
* Sarah Knuckey, Alex Moorehead, Audrey McCalley, and Adam Brown
* 13. Towards the Special Computer Law of Targeting: "Fully Autonomous"
Weapons Systems and the Proportionality Test
* Masahiro Kurosaki
* PART FIVE: Jus Post Bellum
* 14. The Duty to Pay Reparations for the Violation of the Prohibition
of the Use of Force in International Relations and the Jus Post
Bellum
* Elisabeth Günnewig
* Index
* Brigadier General Joseph B. Berger III
* Introduction
* Claus Kreß
* PART ONE: An Encounter of International Law with Morality
* 1. Necessity and Proportionality in Morality and Law
* Jeff McMahan
* PART TWO: Considerations of Overarching Significance
* 2. On the Continuous and Concurrent Application of ad Bellum and in
Bello Proportionality
* Eliav Lieblich
* PART THREE: The International Law Governing the Use of Force
* 3. The Essential Link Between Proportionality and Necessity in the
Exercise of Self-Defense
* Geoffrey S. Corn
* 4. The Unwilling and Unable Test for Extraterritorial Defensive
Force: Why Force Is Permitted Against the Territorial State
* Jens David Ohlin
* 5. Drones Programs, the Individualization of War, and the ad Bellum
Principle of Proportionality
* Rebecca Mignot-Mahdavi
* 6. The Quest for an Internal Jus ad Bellum: International Law's
Missing Link, Mere Distraction, or Pandora's Box?
* Tom Ruys
* 7. Article 51's Reporting Requirement as a Space for Legal Argument
and Factfulness
* Larissa van den Herik
* PART FOUR: The International Law of Armed Conflicts
* 8. Sequences in Military Necessity for the Jus in Bello
* Dino Kritsiotis
* 9. Practical and Conceptual Challenges to Doctrinal Military
Necessity
* Robert Lawless
* 10. Considerations of Necessity Under Article 57(2)(a)(ii), (c), and
(3) and Proportionality Under Article 51(5)(b) and Article 57(2)(b)
of Additional Protocol I: Is There Room for an Integrated Approach?
* Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg
* 11. Specifying the Proportionality Test and the Standard of Due
Precaution: Problems of Prognostic Assessment in Determining the
Meaning of "May Be Expected" and "Anticipated"
* Stefan Oeter
* 12. The Proportionality Rule and Mental Health Harm in War
* Sarah Knuckey, Alex Moorehead, Audrey McCalley, and Adam Brown
* 13. Towards the Special Computer Law of Targeting: "Fully Autonomous"
Weapons Systems and the Proportionality Test
* Masahiro Kurosaki
* PART FIVE: Jus Post Bellum
* 14. The Duty to Pay Reparations for the Violation of the Prohibition
of the Use of Force in International Relations and the Jus Post
Bellum
* Elisabeth Günnewig
* Index
* Foreword
* Brigadier General Joseph B. Berger III
* Introduction
* Claus Kreß
* PART ONE: An Encounter of International Law with Morality
* 1. Necessity and Proportionality in Morality and Law
* Jeff McMahan
* PART TWO: Considerations of Overarching Significance
* 2. On the Continuous and Concurrent Application of ad Bellum and in
Bello Proportionality
* Eliav Lieblich
* PART THREE: The International Law Governing the Use of Force
* 3. The Essential Link Between Proportionality and Necessity in the
Exercise of Self-Defense
* Geoffrey S. Corn
* 4. The Unwilling and Unable Test for Extraterritorial Defensive
Force: Why Force Is Permitted Against the Territorial State
* Jens David Ohlin
* 5. Drones Programs, the Individualization of War, and the ad Bellum
Principle of Proportionality
* Rebecca Mignot-Mahdavi
* 6. The Quest for an Internal Jus ad Bellum: International Law's
Missing Link, Mere Distraction, or Pandora's Box?
* Tom Ruys
* 7. Article 51's Reporting Requirement as a Space for Legal Argument
and Factfulness
* Larissa van den Herik
* PART FOUR: The International Law of Armed Conflicts
* 8. Sequences in Military Necessity for the Jus in Bello
* Dino Kritsiotis
* 9. Practical and Conceptual Challenges to Doctrinal Military
Necessity
* Robert Lawless
* 10. Considerations of Necessity Under Article 57(2)(a)(ii), (c), and
(3) and Proportionality Under Article 51(5)(b) and Article 57(2)(b)
of Additional Protocol I: Is There Room for an Integrated Approach?
* Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg
* 11. Specifying the Proportionality Test and the Standard of Due
Precaution: Problems of Prognostic Assessment in Determining the
Meaning of "May Be Expected" and "Anticipated"
* Stefan Oeter
* 12. The Proportionality Rule and Mental Health Harm in War
* Sarah Knuckey, Alex Moorehead, Audrey McCalley, and Adam Brown
* 13. Towards the Special Computer Law of Targeting: "Fully Autonomous"
Weapons Systems and the Proportionality Test
* Masahiro Kurosaki
* PART FIVE: Jus Post Bellum
* 14. The Duty to Pay Reparations for the Violation of the Prohibition
of the Use of Force in International Relations and the Jus Post
Bellum
* Elisabeth Günnewig
* Index
* Brigadier General Joseph B. Berger III
* Introduction
* Claus Kreß
* PART ONE: An Encounter of International Law with Morality
* 1. Necessity and Proportionality in Morality and Law
* Jeff McMahan
* PART TWO: Considerations of Overarching Significance
* 2. On the Continuous and Concurrent Application of ad Bellum and in
Bello Proportionality
* Eliav Lieblich
* PART THREE: The International Law Governing the Use of Force
* 3. The Essential Link Between Proportionality and Necessity in the
Exercise of Self-Defense
* Geoffrey S. Corn
* 4. The Unwilling and Unable Test for Extraterritorial Defensive
Force: Why Force Is Permitted Against the Territorial State
* Jens David Ohlin
* 5. Drones Programs, the Individualization of War, and the ad Bellum
Principle of Proportionality
* Rebecca Mignot-Mahdavi
* 6. The Quest for an Internal Jus ad Bellum: International Law's
Missing Link, Mere Distraction, or Pandora's Box?
* Tom Ruys
* 7. Article 51's Reporting Requirement as a Space for Legal Argument
and Factfulness
* Larissa van den Herik
* PART FOUR: The International Law of Armed Conflicts
* 8. Sequences in Military Necessity for the Jus in Bello
* Dino Kritsiotis
* 9. Practical and Conceptual Challenges to Doctrinal Military
Necessity
* Robert Lawless
* 10. Considerations of Necessity Under Article 57(2)(a)(ii), (c), and
(3) and Proportionality Under Article 51(5)(b) and Article 57(2)(b)
of Additional Protocol I: Is There Room for an Integrated Approach?
* Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg
* 11. Specifying the Proportionality Test and the Standard of Due
Precaution: Problems of Prognostic Assessment in Determining the
Meaning of "May Be Expected" and "Anticipated"
* Stefan Oeter
* 12. The Proportionality Rule and Mental Health Harm in War
* Sarah Knuckey, Alex Moorehead, Audrey McCalley, and Adam Brown
* 13. Towards the Special Computer Law of Targeting: "Fully Autonomous"
Weapons Systems and the Proportionality Test
* Masahiro Kurosaki
* PART FIVE: Jus Post Bellum
* 14. The Duty to Pay Reparations for the Violation of the Prohibition
of the Use of Force in International Relations and the Jus Post
Bellum
* Elisabeth Günnewig
* Index