Cambridge Handbook of China and International Law (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Rasilla, Ignacio de la; Cai, Congyan
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Cambridge Handbook of China and International Law (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Rasilla, Ignacio de la; Cai, Congyan
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009050418
- Artikelnr.: 70913680
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Introduction: China and international law - not a map but perhaps a compass
Ignacio de la Rasilla and Congyan Cai; Part I. Taking Centre Stage In
Global Governance and the International Legal Order: 1.China's reform and
opening-up and its move to international institutions Yun Zhao; 2. The belt
and road initiative and the international legal order: why it happened,
what it does and how, and what it brings about Congyan Cai; 3. The
Community of shared future for mankind and international law Ignacio de la
Rasilla and Yayezi Hao; Part II. Interfaces between National and
International Law: 4. The constitution of China and international law: from
selective adaptation to normative consensus Chao Wang and Xin Xiang; 5.
Chinese and Western perspectives on the rule of law and its international
implications Karen J. Alter and Ji Li; 6. International law in Chinese
courts Björn Ahl;Part III. Selected areas of Chinese state practice: 7.
China's treaty practices: politicization of law or legalization of
politics? Carrie Shang Shu and Wei Shen; 8. The solid state of state
immunity in the People's Republic of China Timothy Webster; 9. The 'effect
doctrine' and the extraterritorial application of Chinese national laws:
it's easier said than done Yongping Xiao and Lei Zhu; Part IV.
International Peace and Security: 10. The Chinese approach to the jus ad
bellum in International law and cyber-warfare Zhixiong Huang and Yaohui
Ying; 11. China and international terrorism law Congyan Cai and Yifei Wang;
12. China and international criminal law: a dual-identity dilemma Dan Zhu;
Part V. Human-Centred International Law: 13. China and international human
rights law Ruijun Dai; 14. China and global health law in the face of
COVID-19 Qingjiang Kong and Shuai Guo; 15. China and international
humanitarian law Binxin Zhang; Part VI. The Habitat And The Global Commons:
16. China and international environmental law: sageliness within and
kingliness without? Nengye Liu; 17. China and global climate change law
governance: a unison of top-down governance and multi-stakeholder
engagement approach Tianbao Qin and Bingyu Liu; 18. China and the law of
the sea Haiwen Zhang; 19. China and the non-weaponization of outer space:
towards a relational normativity Matthias Vanhullebusch; Part VII.
International Economic Law: 20. China and International trade law: rising
from within the system or always an outlier? Jiangyu Wang; 21. China: an
emerging rule-maker in international investment law? Freya Baetens and
Sheng Zhang; 22. China and international intellectual property law:
striving to become a respected player Jianqiang Nie; 23. Chinese
Multilateralism in international financial law Bin Gu; Part VIII.
International Dispute Settlement: 24. China and international dispute
settlement by adjudicative and other means Ignacio de la Rasilla and Yayezi
Hao; 25. China and the settlement of territorial disputes Xinjun Zhang and
Xidi Chen.
Ignacio de la Rasilla and Congyan Cai; Part I. Taking Centre Stage In
Global Governance and the International Legal Order: 1.China's reform and
opening-up and its move to international institutions Yun Zhao; 2. The belt
and road initiative and the international legal order: why it happened,
what it does and how, and what it brings about Congyan Cai; 3. The
Community of shared future for mankind and international law Ignacio de la
Rasilla and Yayezi Hao; Part II. Interfaces between National and
International Law: 4. The constitution of China and international law: from
selective adaptation to normative consensus Chao Wang and Xin Xiang; 5.
Chinese and Western perspectives on the rule of law and its international
implications Karen J. Alter and Ji Li; 6. International law in Chinese
courts Björn Ahl;Part III. Selected areas of Chinese state practice: 7.
China's treaty practices: politicization of law or legalization of
politics? Carrie Shang Shu and Wei Shen; 8. The solid state of state
immunity in the People's Republic of China Timothy Webster; 9. The 'effect
doctrine' and the extraterritorial application of Chinese national laws:
it's easier said than done Yongping Xiao and Lei Zhu; Part IV.
International Peace and Security: 10. The Chinese approach to the jus ad
bellum in International law and cyber-warfare Zhixiong Huang and Yaohui
Ying; 11. China and international terrorism law Congyan Cai and Yifei Wang;
12. China and international criminal law: a dual-identity dilemma Dan Zhu;
Part V. Human-Centred International Law: 13. China and international human
rights law Ruijun Dai; 14. China and global health law in the face of
COVID-19 Qingjiang Kong and Shuai Guo; 15. China and international
humanitarian law Binxin Zhang; Part VI. The Habitat And The Global Commons:
16. China and international environmental law: sageliness within and
kingliness without? Nengye Liu; 17. China and global climate change law
governance: a unison of top-down governance and multi-stakeholder
engagement approach Tianbao Qin and Bingyu Liu; 18. China and the law of
the sea Haiwen Zhang; 19. China and the non-weaponization of outer space:
towards a relational normativity Matthias Vanhullebusch; Part VII.
International Economic Law: 20. China and International trade law: rising
from within the system or always an outlier? Jiangyu Wang; 21. China: an
emerging rule-maker in international investment law? Freya Baetens and
Sheng Zhang; 22. China and international intellectual property law:
striving to become a respected player Jianqiang Nie; 23. Chinese
Multilateralism in international financial law Bin Gu; Part VIII.
International Dispute Settlement: 24. China and international dispute
settlement by adjudicative and other means Ignacio de la Rasilla and Yayezi
Hao; 25. China and the settlement of territorial disputes Xinjun Zhang and
Xidi Chen.
Introduction: China and international law - not a map but perhaps a compass
Ignacio de la Rasilla and Congyan Cai; Part I. Taking Centre Stage In
Global Governance and the International Legal Order: 1.China's reform and
opening-up and its move to international institutions Yun Zhao; 2. The belt
and road initiative and the international legal order: why it happened,
what it does and how, and what it brings about Congyan Cai; 3. The
Community of shared future for mankind and international law Ignacio de la
Rasilla and Yayezi Hao; Part II. Interfaces between National and
International Law: 4. The constitution of China and international law: from
selective adaptation to normative consensus Chao Wang and Xin Xiang; 5.
Chinese and Western perspectives on the rule of law and its international
implications Karen J. Alter and Ji Li; 6. International law in Chinese
courts Björn Ahl;Part III. Selected areas of Chinese state practice: 7.
China's treaty practices: politicization of law or legalization of
politics? Carrie Shang Shu and Wei Shen; 8. The solid state of state
immunity in the People's Republic of China Timothy Webster; 9. The 'effect
doctrine' and the extraterritorial application of Chinese national laws:
it's easier said than done Yongping Xiao and Lei Zhu; Part IV.
International Peace and Security: 10. The Chinese approach to the jus ad
bellum in International law and cyber-warfare Zhixiong Huang and Yaohui
Ying; 11. China and international terrorism law Congyan Cai and Yifei Wang;
12. China and international criminal law: a dual-identity dilemma Dan Zhu;
Part V. Human-Centred International Law: 13. China and international human
rights law Ruijun Dai; 14. China and global health law in the face of
COVID-19 Qingjiang Kong and Shuai Guo; 15. China and international
humanitarian law Binxin Zhang; Part VI. The Habitat And The Global Commons:
16. China and international environmental law: sageliness within and
kingliness without? Nengye Liu; 17. China and global climate change law
governance: a unison of top-down governance and multi-stakeholder
engagement approach Tianbao Qin and Bingyu Liu; 18. China and the law of
the sea Haiwen Zhang; 19. China and the non-weaponization of outer space:
towards a relational normativity Matthias Vanhullebusch; Part VII.
International Economic Law: 20. China and International trade law: rising
from within the system or always an outlier? Jiangyu Wang; 21. China: an
emerging rule-maker in international investment law? Freya Baetens and
Sheng Zhang; 22. China and international intellectual property law:
striving to become a respected player Jianqiang Nie; 23. Chinese
Multilateralism in international financial law Bin Gu; Part VIII.
International Dispute Settlement: 24. China and international dispute
settlement by adjudicative and other means Ignacio de la Rasilla and Yayezi
Hao; 25. China and the settlement of territorial disputes Xinjun Zhang and
Xidi Chen.
Ignacio de la Rasilla and Congyan Cai; Part I. Taking Centre Stage In
Global Governance and the International Legal Order: 1.China's reform and
opening-up and its move to international institutions Yun Zhao; 2. The belt
and road initiative and the international legal order: why it happened,
what it does and how, and what it brings about Congyan Cai; 3. The
Community of shared future for mankind and international law Ignacio de la
Rasilla and Yayezi Hao; Part II. Interfaces between National and
International Law: 4. The constitution of China and international law: from
selective adaptation to normative consensus Chao Wang and Xin Xiang; 5.
Chinese and Western perspectives on the rule of law and its international
implications Karen J. Alter and Ji Li; 6. International law in Chinese
courts Björn Ahl;Part III. Selected areas of Chinese state practice: 7.
China's treaty practices: politicization of law or legalization of
politics? Carrie Shang Shu and Wei Shen; 8. The solid state of state
immunity in the People's Republic of China Timothy Webster; 9. The 'effect
doctrine' and the extraterritorial application of Chinese national laws:
it's easier said than done Yongping Xiao and Lei Zhu; Part IV.
International Peace and Security: 10. The Chinese approach to the jus ad
bellum in International law and cyber-warfare Zhixiong Huang and Yaohui
Ying; 11. China and international terrorism law Congyan Cai and Yifei Wang;
12. China and international criminal law: a dual-identity dilemma Dan Zhu;
Part V. Human-Centred International Law: 13. China and international human
rights law Ruijun Dai; 14. China and global health law in the face of
COVID-19 Qingjiang Kong and Shuai Guo; 15. China and international
humanitarian law Binxin Zhang; Part VI. The Habitat And The Global Commons:
16. China and international environmental law: sageliness within and
kingliness without? Nengye Liu; 17. China and global climate change law
governance: a unison of top-down governance and multi-stakeholder
engagement approach Tianbao Qin and Bingyu Liu; 18. China and the law of
the sea Haiwen Zhang; 19. China and the non-weaponization of outer space:
towards a relational normativity Matthias Vanhullebusch; Part VII.
International Economic Law: 20. China and International trade law: rising
from within the system or always an outlier? Jiangyu Wang; 21. China: an
emerging rule-maker in international investment law? Freya Baetens and
Sheng Zhang; 22. China and international intellectual property law:
striving to become a respected player Jianqiang Nie; 23. Chinese
Multilateralism in international financial law Bin Gu; Part VIII.
International Dispute Settlement: 24. China and international dispute
settlement by adjudicative and other means Ignacio de la Rasilla and Yayezi
Hao; 25. China and the settlement of territorial disputes Xinjun Zhang and
Xidi Chen.