Cambridge Handbook of China and International Law (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Rasilla, Ignacio de la; Cai, Congyan
146,95 €
146,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
73 °P sammeln
146,95 €
Als Download kaufen
146,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
73 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
146,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
73 °P sammeln
Cambridge Handbook of China and International Law (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Rasilla, Ignacio de la; Cai, Congyan
- Format: PDF
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
- Geräte: PC
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 6.35MB
- FamilySharing(5)
Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009050616
- Artikelnr.: 70910473
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
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.