Consenting to International Law (eBook, PDF)
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Consenting to International Law (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Besson, Samantha
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009406437
- Artikelnr.: 70911993
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- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Part I. Notions and Roles of Consent: 1. Consenting is not willing Alain
Pellet; 2. State consent and the legitimacy of international law David
Lefkowitz; 3. Controlling consent: insights from binding dispute settlement
Christian Tams; 4. International organizations and the disaggregation of
consent Catherine Brölmann; 5. Consenting to international law in five
moves Jean d'Aspremont; Part II. Objects and Types of Consent: 6. Do
international agreements have a consent problem? Duncan B. Hollis; 7.
Consenting to treaty commitments: endorsing rules or endorsing a regime of
discursive commitments? Fuad Zarbiyev; 8. State consent in the evolving
climate regime: individual and collective aspects Jutta Brunnée; 9. Consent
and sources: the European court of human rights and the international law
commission Georg Nolte; 10. Variations around the notion of consent in
investment arbitration Laurence Boisson de Chazournes; Part III. Subjects
and Institutions of Consent: 11. The consent of international organizations
in the making of general and conventional rules of international law
Fernando Lusa Bordin; 12. Consent and informal law-making: the view from
the court of justice of the European union Eva Kassoti; 13. Consent as a
guarantee of the democratic legitimacy of international law Monique
Chemillier-Gendreau; 14. From equal state consent to equal public
participation in international organizations: institutionalizing multiple
international representation Samantha Besson and José Luis Martí; 15.
Autonomy in international law: about the legal and societal limits to the
exercise of consent Yannick Radi; Index.
Pellet; 2. State consent and the legitimacy of international law David
Lefkowitz; 3. Controlling consent: insights from binding dispute settlement
Christian Tams; 4. International organizations and the disaggregation of
consent Catherine Brölmann; 5. Consenting to international law in five
moves Jean d'Aspremont; Part II. Objects and Types of Consent: 6. Do
international agreements have a consent problem? Duncan B. Hollis; 7.
Consenting to treaty commitments: endorsing rules or endorsing a regime of
discursive commitments? Fuad Zarbiyev; 8. State consent in the evolving
climate regime: individual and collective aspects Jutta Brunnée; 9. Consent
and sources: the European court of human rights and the international law
commission Georg Nolte; 10. Variations around the notion of consent in
investment arbitration Laurence Boisson de Chazournes; Part III. Subjects
and Institutions of Consent: 11. The consent of international organizations
in the making of general and conventional rules of international law
Fernando Lusa Bordin; 12. Consent and informal law-making: the view from
the court of justice of the European union Eva Kassoti; 13. Consent as a
guarantee of the democratic legitimacy of international law Monique
Chemillier-Gendreau; 14. From equal state consent to equal public
participation in international organizations: institutionalizing multiple
international representation Samantha Besson and José Luis Martí; 15.
Autonomy in international law: about the legal and societal limits to the
exercise of consent Yannick Radi; Index.
Part I. Notions and Roles of Consent: 1. Consenting is not willing Alain
Pellet; 2. State consent and the legitimacy of international law David
Lefkowitz; 3. Controlling consent: insights from binding dispute settlement
Christian Tams; 4. International organizations and the disaggregation of
consent Catherine Brölmann; 5. Consenting to international law in five
moves Jean d'Aspremont; Part II. Objects and Types of Consent: 6. Do
international agreements have a consent problem? Duncan B. Hollis; 7.
Consenting to treaty commitments: endorsing rules or endorsing a regime of
discursive commitments? Fuad Zarbiyev; 8. State consent in the evolving
climate regime: individual and collective aspects Jutta Brunnée; 9. Consent
and sources: the European court of human rights and the international law
commission Georg Nolte; 10. Variations around the notion of consent in
investment arbitration Laurence Boisson de Chazournes; Part III. Subjects
and Institutions of Consent: 11. The consent of international organizations
in the making of general and conventional rules of international law
Fernando Lusa Bordin; 12. Consent and informal law-making: the view from
the court of justice of the European union Eva Kassoti; 13. Consent as a
guarantee of the democratic legitimacy of international law Monique
Chemillier-Gendreau; 14. From equal state consent to equal public
participation in international organizations: institutionalizing multiple
international representation Samantha Besson and José Luis Martí; 15.
Autonomy in international law: about the legal and societal limits to the
exercise of consent Yannick Radi; Index.
Pellet; 2. State consent and the legitimacy of international law David
Lefkowitz; 3. Controlling consent: insights from binding dispute settlement
Christian Tams; 4. International organizations and the disaggregation of
consent Catherine Brölmann; 5. Consenting to international law in five
moves Jean d'Aspremont; Part II. Objects and Types of Consent: 6. Do
international agreements have a consent problem? Duncan B. Hollis; 7.
Consenting to treaty commitments: endorsing rules or endorsing a regime of
discursive commitments? Fuad Zarbiyev; 8. State consent in the evolving
climate regime: individual and collective aspects Jutta Brunnée; 9. Consent
and sources: the European court of human rights and the international law
commission Georg Nolte; 10. Variations around the notion of consent in
investment arbitration Laurence Boisson de Chazournes; Part III. Subjects
and Institutions of Consent: 11. The consent of international organizations
in the making of general and conventional rules of international law
Fernando Lusa Bordin; 12. Consent and informal law-making: the view from
the court of justice of the European union Eva Kassoti; 13. Consent as a
guarantee of the democratic legitimacy of international law Monique
Chemillier-Gendreau; 14. From equal state consent to equal public
participation in international organizations: institutionalizing multiple
international representation Samantha Besson and José Luis Martí; 15.
Autonomy in international law: about the legal and societal limits to the
exercise of consent Yannick Radi; Index.