Sovereignty, Statehood and State Responsibility
Herausgeber: Baetens, Freya; Chinkin, Christine
Sovereignty, Statehood and State Responsibility
Herausgeber: Baetens, Freya; Chinkin, Christine
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A timely, thought-provoking and innovative reappraisal of the core actors on the international stage: states.
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A timely, thought-provoking and innovative reappraisal of the core actors on the international stage: states.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9781107044258
- ISBN-10: 1107044251
- Artikelnr.: 41612487
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9781107044258
- ISBN-10: 1107044251
- Artikelnr.: 41612487
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
An Australian in England Philippe Sands; James Crawford: the earlier years
Ivan Shearer; Part I. Sovereignty: 1. The war against cliché: dispatches
from the international legal front Susan Marks and Karen Knop; 2.
International law and the responsibility to protect Michael Byers; 3. Human
rights beyond borders at the World Court Ralph Wilde; 4. Fragmentation,
regime interaction and sovereignty Margaret Young; 5. The legitimacy of
investment treaties: between exit, voice and James Crawford's quest for a
more democratic international law Lluis Paradell-Trius; 6. Polar
territorial and maritime sovereignty in the twenty-first century Don
Rothwell; 7. An enquiry into the palimpsestic nature of territorial
sovereignty in East Asia - with particular reference to the
Senkaku/Diaoyudao question Keun-Gwan Lee; 8. General legal characteristics
of states: a view from the past of the Permanent Court of International
Justice Ole Spiermann; Part II. Statehood: 9. The Security Council and
statehood Christine Chinkin; 10. The dynamics of statehood in the practice
of international and English courts Alexander Orakhelashvili; 11. How to
recognise a state (and not): some practical considerations Tom Grant; 12.
An analysis of the 1969 Act of Free Choice in West Papua Tom Musgrave; 13.
Recognition of the State of Palestine: still too much too soon? Yael Ronen;
14. The role of the Uti Possidetis Principle in the Resolution of Maritime
Boundary Disputes Suzanne Lalonde; 15. A room for 'state continuity' in
international law? A constitutionalist perspective Ineta Ziemele; Part III.
State Responsibility: 16. Law-making in complex processes: the World Court
and the modern law of state responsibility Christian Tams; 17. Defending
individual ships from pirates: questions of state responsibility and
immunity Douglas Guilfoyle; 18. Excessive collateral civilian casualties
and military necessity: awkward crossroads in international humanitarian
law between state responsibility and individual criminal liability Yutaka
Arai-Takahashi; 19. Third-party countermeasures: observations on a
controversial concept Martin Dawidowicz; 20. The Appellate Body's use of
the articles on state responsibility in US - anti-dumping and
countervailing duties (China) Isabelle Van Damme; 21. The application of
the rules on countermeasures in investment claims: visions and realities of
international law as an open system Kate Parlett; 22. The external
relations of the European Union and its Member States: lessons from recent
developments in the economic sphere Damien Geradin; 23. Invoking,
establishing and remedying state responsibility in mixed multi-party
disputes: lessons from Eurotunnel Freya Baetens.
Ivan Shearer; Part I. Sovereignty: 1. The war against cliché: dispatches
from the international legal front Susan Marks and Karen Knop; 2.
International law and the responsibility to protect Michael Byers; 3. Human
rights beyond borders at the World Court Ralph Wilde; 4. Fragmentation,
regime interaction and sovereignty Margaret Young; 5. The legitimacy of
investment treaties: between exit, voice and James Crawford's quest for a
more democratic international law Lluis Paradell-Trius; 6. Polar
territorial and maritime sovereignty in the twenty-first century Don
Rothwell; 7. An enquiry into the palimpsestic nature of territorial
sovereignty in East Asia - with particular reference to the
Senkaku/Diaoyudao question Keun-Gwan Lee; 8. General legal characteristics
of states: a view from the past of the Permanent Court of International
Justice Ole Spiermann; Part II. Statehood: 9. The Security Council and
statehood Christine Chinkin; 10. The dynamics of statehood in the practice
of international and English courts Alexander Orakhelashvili; 11. How to
recognise a state (and not): some practical considerations Tom Grant; 12.
An analysis of the 1969 Act of Free Choice in West Papua Tom Musgrave; 13.
Recognition of the State of Palestine: still too much too soon? Yael Ronen;
14. The role of the Uti Possidetis Principle in the Resolution of Maritime
Boundary Disputes Suzanne Lalonde; 15. A room for 'state continuity' in
international law? A constitutionalist perspective Ineta Ziemele; Part III.
State Responsibility: 16. Law-making in complex processes: the World Court
and the modern law of state responsibility Christian Tams; 17. Defending
individual ships from pirates: questions of state responsibility and
immunity Douglas Guilfoyle; 18. Excessive collateral civilian casualties
and military necessity: awkward crossroads in international humanitarian
law between state responsibility and individual criminal liability Yutaka
Arai-Takahashi; 19. Third-party countermeasures: observations on a
controversial concept Martin Dawidowicz; 20. The Appellate Body's use of
the articles on state responsibility in US - anti-dumping and
countervailing duties (China) Isabelle Van Damme; 21. The application of
the rules on countermeasures in investment claims: visions and realities of
international law as an open system Kate Parlett; 22. The external
relations of the European Union and its Member States: lessons from recent
developments in the economic sphere Damien Geradin; 23. Invoking,
establishing and remedying state responsibility in mixed multi-party
disputes: lessons from Eurotunnel Freya Baetens.
An Australian in England Philippe Sands; James Crawford: the earlier years
Ivan Shearer; Part I. Sovereignty: 1. The war against cliché: dispatches
from the international legal front Susan Marks and Karen Knop; 2.
International law and the responsibility to protect Michael Byers; 3. Human
rights beyond borders at the World Court Ralph Wilde; 4. Fragmentation,
regime interaction and sovereignty Margaret Young; 5. The legitimacy of
investment treaties: between exit, voice and James Crawford's quest for a
more democratic international law Lluis Paradell-Trius; 6. Polar
territorial and maritime sovereignty in the twenty-first century Don
Rothwell; 7. An enquiry into the palimpsestic nature of territorial
sovereignty in East Asia - with particular reference to the
Senkaku/Diaoyudao question Keun-Gwan Lee; 8. General legal characteristics
of states: a view from the past of the Permanent Court of International
Justice Ole Spiermann; Part II. Statehood: 9. The Security Council and
statehood Christine Chinkin; 10. The dynamics of statehood in the practice
of international and English courts Alexander Orakhelashvili; 11. How to
recognise a state (and not): some practical considerations Tom Grant; 12.
An analysis of the 1969 Act of Free Choice in West Papua Tom Musgrave; 13.
Recognition of the State of Palestine: still too much too soon? Yael Ronen;
14. The role of the Uti Possidetis Principle in the Resolution of Maritime
Boundary Disputes Suzanne Lalonde; 15. A room for 'state continuity' in
international law? A constitutionalist perspective Ineta Ziemele; Part III.
State Responsibility: 16. Law-making in complex processes: the World Court
and the modern law of state responsibility Christian Tams; 17. Defending
individual ships from pirates: questions of state responsibility and
immunity Douglas Guilfoyle; 18. Excessive collateral civilian casualties
and military necessity: awkward crossroads in international humanitarian
law between state responsibility and individual criminal liability Yutaka
Arai-Takahashi; 19. Third-party countermeasures: observations on a
controversial concept Martin Dawidowicz; 20. The Appellate Body's use of
the articles on state responsibility in US - anti-dumping and
countervailing duties (China) Isabelle Van Damme; 21. The application of
the rules on countermeasures in investment claims: visions and realities of
international law as an open system Kate Parlett; 22. The external
relations of the European Union and its Member States: lessons from recent
developments in the economic sphere Damien Geradin; 23. Invoking,
establishing and remedying state responsibility in mixed multi-party
disputes: lessons from Eurotunnel Freya Baetens.
Ivan Shearer; Part I. Sovereignty: 1. The war against cliché: dispatches
from the international legal front Susan Marks and Karen Knop; 2.
International law and the responsibility to protect Michael Byers; 3. Human
rights beyond borders at the World Court Ralph Wilde; 4. Fragmentation,
regime interaction and sovereignty Margaret Young; 5. The legitimacy of
investment treaties: between exit, voice and James Crawford's quest for a
more democratic international law Lluis Paradell-Trius; 6. Polar
territorial and maritime sovereignty in the twenty-first century Don
Rothwell; 7. An enquiry into the palimpsestic nature of territorial
sovereignty in East Asia - with particular reference to the
Senkaku/Diaoyudao question Keun-Gwan Lee; 8. General legal characteristics
of states: a view from the past of the Permanent Court of International
Justice Ole Spiermann; Part II. Statehood: 9. The Security Council and
statehood Christine Chinkin; 10. The dynamics of statehood in the practice
of international and English courts Alexander Orakhelashvili; 11. How to
recognise a state (and not): some practical considerations Tom Grant; 12.
An analysis of the 1969 Act of Free Choice in West Papua Tom Musgrave; 13.
Recognition of the State of Palestine: still too much too soon? Yael Ronen;
14. The role of the Uti Possidetis Principle in the Resolution of Maritime
Boundary Disputes Suzanne Lalonde; 15. A room for 'state continuity' in
international law? A constitutionalist perspective Ineta Ziemele; Part III.
State Responsibility: 16. Law-making in complex processes: the World Court
and the modern law of state responsibility Christian Tams; 17. Defending
individual ships from pirates: questions of state responsibility and
immunity Douglas Guilfoyle; 18. Excessive collateral civilian casualties
and military necessity: awkward crossroads in international humanitarian
law between state responsibility and individual criminal liability Yutaka
Arai-Takahashi; 19. Third-party countermeasures: observations on a
controversial concept Martin Dawidowicz; 20. The Appellate Body's use of
the articles on state responsibility in US - anti-dumping and
countervailing duties (China) Isabelle Van Damme; 21. The application of
the rules on countermeasures in investment claims: visions and realities of
international law as an open system Kate Parlett; 22. The external
relations of the European Union and its Member States: lessons from recent
developments in the economic sphere Damien Geradin; 23. Invoking,
establishing and remedying state responsibility in mixed multi-party
disputes: lessons from Eurotunnel Freya Baetens.