31. | Bieliunas, Egidiunas ... [et al.] : Baltic yearbook of international law : vol. 10, 2010, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Baltic yearbook of international law : vol. 10, 2010 / Bieliunas, Egidiunas ... [et al.], 517 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2011. ISBN 978-9004-20500-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: GENERAL ARTICLES:. 1. Tanel Kerimäe, Katrin Nyman-Metcalf and Mari-Liis Pöder: The August 2008 Russian-georgian war:issues of international law. 2. Dovydas Spokauskas: Suspension of the operation of an international treaty:analysis of the decision by the Russian Federation to suspend the implementation of its obligations under the treaty on conventional armed forces in Europe. 3. Arnis Lauva: Why soldiers have to perform combat tasks:Latvian perspective. 4. Jo Stigen: The right or non-right of states to prosecute core international crimes uner the title of "Universal jurisdiction". 5. Carl Lebeck: Consensus not constitutionalism : fundamental rights in EU law after Kadi. 6. Christoph Schewe: Legal aspects of the Baltic Sea strategy - international law in a European macro-region. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Estonia / Latvia / Lithuania NOTE (GENERAL): Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; CAT; TFEU; |
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32. | Netherlands yearbook of international law, vol. 41, 2010, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Netherlands yearbook of international law, vol. 41, 2010 /, xiv, 543 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser, 2011. - ISSN 0167-676 ISBN 978-90-6704-736-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. PART I: Articles: Necessity Across International Law:. 1. Necessity Across International Law: An Introduction, by Tarcisio Gazzini, Wouter G. Werner and Ige F. Dekker. 2. Necessity and the Use of Force: A Special Regime, by Nicholas Tsagourias. 3. Necessity in the Law of Armed Conflict and in International Criminal Law, by Gabriella Venturini. 4. State Responsibility, Necessity and Human Rights , by Cedric Ryngaert. 5. A Necessity Paradigm of ‘Necessity’ in International Economic Law, by Asif H. Qureshi. 6. Necessity in Investment Arbitration , by August Reinisch. 7. Necessity in International Environmental Law , by Malgosia Fitzmaurice. 8. The Notion of Necessity in the Law of the European Union, by Panos Koutrakos. PART II Documentation:. 9. Classification Scheme. 10. Netherlands State Practice for the Parliamentary Year 2008–2009, by P. van Huizen. 11. Treaties and Other International Agreements to Which the Kingdom of the Netherlands is a Party, by M. A. van der Harst. 12. Netherlands Municipal Legislation Involving Questions of Public International Law, 2009 , by M. A. van der Harst. 13. Netherlands Judicial Decisions Involving Questions of Public International Law, 2008–2009, by L. A. N. M. Barnhoorn. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRPD; Refugee convention; Convention on the prohibition of the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and on their destruction; Declaration of the right of development; ECHR; CRC; AMR; ICCPR; ICESCR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna convention on consular relations; LIBRARY LOCATION: S Netherlands yb
URL http://www.springer.com/law/international/book/978-90-6704-736-4 |
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33. | Proceedings of the 103rd annual meeting, March 25-28, 2009, Washington, DC, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Proceedings of the 103rd annual meeting, March 25-28, 2009, Washington, DC /, xii, 543 p.. - Washington, DC : American Society of International Law, 2010. - ISSN 0272-5037 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. An introduction : international law as law. 2. Eleventh annual Grotius lecture. 3. Responsibility to protect in environmental emergencies. 4. A comparative look at domestic enforcement of international decisions. 5. International aspects of the global financial crisis. 6. Feminist interventions: human rights, armed conflict and international law. 7. New voices: rethinking the sources of international law. 8. Medellin v. Texas and the self-execution of treaties. 9. Piracy off Somalia: the challenges for international law. 10. The principle of legality in international criminal law. 11. Multilateralizing regionalism and the future architecture of international trade law. 12. Closing Guantanamo:the legal and policy issues. 13. Is legal empowerment good for the poor? 14. In what sense is international law law? 15. The United States and international law during the Obama administration. 16. Is the UN Security Council bound by human rights law? 17. The impact of international criminal proceedings in mass atrocity cases. 18. New voices: issues in the human side of international law. 19. Governing through indicators. 20. The Security Council and the rule of law. 21. Challenges of transnational legal practice: advocacy and ethics. 22. The cutting edge. 23. the future of corporate accountability for violations of human rights. 24. Direct participation in hostilities. 25. Presentation & discussion of the SIL task force report on U.S. policy towards the International Crimional Court. 26. Mapping the future of investment treaty arbitration as a system of law. 27. Irresponsible arms trade and the arms trade treaty. 28. International law and the 'war of terror': a look back. 29. Border tax adjustments: climate change, the WTO and new tools for international environmental law-making. 30. Visions of international law: insight from normative theory. 31. U.S. implementation of the 2005 hague convention on choice-of-courts agreements. 32. International law as law at the International Court of Justice. 33. ASIL-ILSA dinner celebrating the Jessup competition's 50th anniversary. 34. Changing concepts of state sovereignty. 35. Can 'development' be operationalized in international economic law?. 36. Evolutions of the jus ad bellum: the crime of aggression. 37. A transatlantic view of international law and lawyers:cooperation and conflict in hard times. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ECHR; ICCPR; ICC statute; LIBRARY LOCATION: S ASIL |
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34. | Giegericht, Thomas (ed.) : German yearbook of international law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph German yearbook of international law : volume 53 - 2010 / Giegericht, Thomas (ed.) ; Proelss, Alexander, 1044 p.. - Berlin : Duncker & Humblot, 2011. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 978-3-428-13622-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. FORUM: Perspectives on International Law from China:. B.B. Jia: A Synthesis of the Notion of Sovereignty and the Ideal of the Rule of Law: Reflections on the Contemporary Chinese Approach to International Law. FOCUS: Climate Change and new Challenges for International Law:. 1. A. Proelss: International Environmental Law and the Challenge of Climate Change. 2. M. Fitzmauric: Responsibility and Climate Change. 3. P. Aerni, B. Boie, T. Cottier, K. Holzer, D. Jost, B. Karapinar, S. Matteotti, O. Nartova, T. Payosova, L. Rubini, A. Shingal, F. Temmerman, E. Xoplaki, & S. Z. Bigdeli: Climate Change and International Law: Exploring the Linkages between Human Rights, Environment, Trade and Investment. 4. C. Schofield, Rising Waters: Shrinking States: The Potential Impacts of Sea Level Rise on Claims to Maritime Jurisdiction. 5. J. McAdam & B. Saul: Displacement with Dignity: International Law and Policy Responses to Climate Change Migration and Security in Bangladesh. 6. M. Bowman: Conserving Biological Diversity in an Era of Climate Change: Local Implementation of International Wildlife Treaties. 7. J. Gupta: Climate Change: A GAP Analysis Based on Third World Approaches to International Law. 8. W. Th. Douma: Legal Aspects of the European Union's Biofuels Policy: Protection or Protectionism? GENERAL ARTICLES:. 1. G. Handl: In Re South African Apartheid Litigation and Beyond: Corporate Liability for Aiding and Abetting Under the Alien Tort Statute. 2. K. Ambos: The Crime of Aggression after Kampala. 3. K. Odendahl: The Scope of Application of the Principle of Territorial Integrity. 4. C. Riziki Majinge: Southern Sudan and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Contemporary Africa: Examining its Basis Under International Law. 5. A. Gourgourinis: Lex Specialis in WTO and Investment Protection Law. 6. A. Peters: Extraterritorial Naturalizations: Between the Human Right to Nationality, State Sovereignty and Fair Principles of Jurisdiction. 7. P. Pustorino: Failed States and International Law: The Impact of UN Practice on Somalia in Respect of Fundamental Rules of International Law. 8. P. Kroker: Transitional Justice Policy in Practice: Victim Participation in the Khmer Rouge Tribunal. 9. K. Oellers-Frahm: Problematic Question or Problematic Answer? Observations on the International Court of Justice's Advisory Opinion Concerning Kosovo's Unilateral Declaration of Independence. GERMAN PRACTICE:. 1. W. Heintschel von Heinegg, P. Dreist: The 2009 Kunduz Air Attack: The Decision of the Federal Prosecutor-General on the Dismissal of Criminal Proceedings Against Members of the German Armed Forces. 2. T. Giegerich: The Federal Constitutional Court's Non-Sustainable Role as Europe's Ultimate Arbiter: From Age Discrimination to the Saving of the Euro. 3. T. Giegerich, O. Daum: Chechen Rebels as "Bona Fide Refugees"? The Judgment of the Federal Administrative Court of 24 November 2009. 4. D. Blöcher: Retraction of Definitive Administrative Acts after a Change in Case Law. 5. P. Wennholz: Refugee Protection for a Leading War Criminal? The Judgment of the Munich Higher Administrative Court of 11 January 2010. 6. H. Wieduwilt: The German Federal Constitutional Court Puts the Data Retention Directive on Hold. 7. A. Proelss: Enforcement of the Obligation to Refer to the European Court of Justice Under Article 267 (3) TFEU. 8. M. Krivickaite, H.-C. Schröder: The New German Federal Nature Conservation Act in the Context of the International Law of the Sea. 9. B. Schriewer, Gäfgen v. Germany Revisited. 10. W. Staff: Germany's National Preventive Mechanism Under the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention Against Torture. 11. T. Thienel: Human Rights of Biological Fathers v. Hard and Fast Rules: The Case of Anayo v. Germany. 12. J. Siegfried, B. Schriewer, P. Braasch: The Withdrawal of Germany's Unilateral Statement on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. 13. P. Braasch: Deportation of Foreign Nationals Under Article 12 (4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 14. F. Bieker, L. Frahm: Follow-Up: The Implementation of the ECtHR's Judgment in the Case M. v. Germany 15. A. Makee Mosa, F. Seesko: Can the 2008 Framework Decision on the Fight against Organized Crime Influence German Criminal Law?. 16. P. Zickert: German Legal Protection Against the European Patent Organisation and Other International Organizations. 17. O. Daum: Follow-Up: The Zaunegger v. Germany Case. 18. P. Braasch: Follow-Up: The European Court of Human Rights' Pilot Judgment on Excessive Length of Proceedings Before German Courts. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Germany / China NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ICC statute; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; ICCPR; ICESCR; |
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35. | McGonigle Leyh, Brianne : Procedural justice?, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Procedural justice? : victim participation in international criminal proceedings / McGonigle Leyh, Brianne - (School of human rights research series ; vol. 42), xviii, 452 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2011. ISBN 978-1-78068-020-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION:. Chapter 1 Introduction. PART I ORIGINS AND INFLUENCE:. Chapter 2: Victims and Theories of Criminal Justice. Chapter 3: Domestic Criminal Justice and Victim Participation Models. Chapter 4: International Developments and Victims of Crime. PART II EXPERIMENTING LABORATORIES:. Chapter 5: International Criminal Courts: A Wide Range of Practices. Chapter 6: Victim Participation and the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia. Chapter 7: Victim Participation at the International Criminal Court. CONCLUSION: Chapter 8: Conclusions and Recommendations. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; ACHPR; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; UDHR; |
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36. | Tanaka, Yuki (ed.) : Beyond victor's justice, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Beyond victor's justice : the Tokyo war crimes trial revisited / Tanaka, Yuki (ed.) ; McCormack, Tim ; Simpson, Gerry - (International humanitarian law series ; vol. 30), xxxi, 402 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2011. ISBN 978-9004-20303-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART ONE: A RETROPERSPECTIVE:. Chapter 1: The Tokyo Trial: Humanity’s Justice v Victors’ Justice, by Fujita Hisakazu. Chapter 2: Writing the Tokyo Trial, by Gerry Simpson. Chapter 3: Japanese Societal Attitude towards the Tokyo Trial: From a Contemporary Perspective, by Madoka Futamura. PART TWO : THE ACCUSED:. Chapter 4: Selecting Defendants at the Tokyo Trial, by Awaya Kentaro. Chapter 5: The Decision Not to Prosecute the Emperor, by Yoriko Otomo. PART THREE : THE JUDGES:. Chapter 6 : Justice Northcroft (New Zealand), by Ann Trotter. Chapter 7 : Justice Bernard (France), by Mickaël Ho Foui Sang. Chapter 8: Justice Patrick (United Kingdom), by Lord Bonomy. Chapter 9: Justice Roling (The Netherlands), by Robert Cryer. Chapter 10: Justice Pal (India), by Nakajima Takeshi. PART FOUR: THE TRIAL PROCEEDINGS:. Chapter 11: The Case against the Accused, by Yuma Totani. Chapter 12: Command Responsibility for the Failure to Stop Atrocities: The Legacy of the Tokyo Trial, by Gideon Boas. PART FIVE: FORGOTTEN CRIMES : CHINA AND KOREA: Chapter 13: Reasons for the Failure to Prosecute Unit 731 and Its Significance, by Tsuneishi Kei-ichi. Chapter 14: The Legacy of the Tokyo Trial in China, by Bing Bing Jia. Chapter 15: Forgotten Victims, Forgotten Defendants, by The Hon O-Gon Kwon. PART SIX: FORGOTTEN CRIMES: THE COMFORT WOMEN:. Chapter 16: Knowledge and Responsibility: The Ongoing Consequences of Failing to Give Sufficient Attention to the Crimes against the Comfort Women in the Tokyo Trial, by Ustinia Dolgopol. Chapter 17: Silence as Collective Memory: Sexual Violence and the Tokyo Trial, by Nicola Henry. Chapter 18: Women’s Bodies and International Criminal Law: From Tokyo to Rabaul, by Helen Durham and Narrelle Morris. PART SEVEN: FORGOTTEN CRIMES:ATOMIC BOMBS, SATURATION BOMING AND THE ILLICIT DRUG TRADE:. Chapter 19 The Atomic Bombing, the Tokyo Tribunal and the Shimoda Case: Lessons for Anti-Nuclear Legal Movements, by Yuki Tanaka. Chapter 20: The Firebombing of Tokyo and Other Japanese Cities, by Ian Henderson. Chapter 21: Punishing Japan’s ‘Opium War-Making’ in China: The Relationship between Transnational Crime and Aggression at the Tokyo Tribunal, by Neil Boister. PART EIGHT : TOKYO TODAY:. Chapter 22: Tokyo’s Continuing Relevance, by Sarah Finnin and Tim McCormack. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CAT; Convention on the prohibition of the use, stockpilling, protection and transfer of anti-personnel mines and of their destruction; Tokyo charter; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Hague conventions; UDHR; ICCPR; IMT charter; Nuremburg charter; Montevideo convention on the rights and duties of states;
URL http://www.brill.nl/beyond-victors-justice-tokyo-war-crimes-trial-revisited |
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37. | Constantinides, Aristotle (ed.) : The diversity of international law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The diversity of international law : essays in honour of Professor Kalliopi K. Koufa / Constantinides, Aristotle (ed.) ; Zaikos, Nikos, xliv, 674 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-18039-0 LANGUAGE: ENG, FRE ABSTRACT: PART ONE:CONSTITUTIONALIZING THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM:. 1. Observations sur la consolidation des valeurs communes en droit des gens contemporain / Christian Dominice´. 2. Les re`gles d'ordre public en droit international / Constantin P. Economide`s. 3. Constitutional problems of investor-state arbitration / Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann. PART TWO: ISSUES OF LAW-MAKING IN CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 4. Multiculturalism and contemporary international law and law-making / Edward McWhinney. 5. The Security Council as legislator / Tullio Treves. 6. The participation of NGOs in the international regulatory function / Maria Clelia Ciciriello. PART THREE: PROLIFERATION OF DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISMS:. 7. Issues concerning parallel proceedings in international dispute settlement / Francisco Orrego-Vicuna. 8. The creation of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea as a specialized court / Hugo Caminos. 9. Reflections on dispute settlement in the light of recent arbitrations involving Eritrea / John G. Merrills. PART FOUR: UPHOLDING THE RULE OF LAW WHILE COUNTERING TERRORISM:. 10. The protection of nationals abroad : Russia's use of force in Georgia / Christine Gray. 11. State sovereignty in times of terrorism / Rafael Nieto-Navia. 12. Causes worth fighting for : is there a non-state jus ad bellum? / Frederic Megret. 13. Security and human rights : balance or fear? / Pieter van Dijk. 14. Protecting human rights vis-a`-vis 'targeted' UN Security Council sanctions / Torsten Stein. 15. Targeted anti-terrorist sanctions and their implications for international law normative and institutional coherency / Pavel Sturma and Veronika Bilkova´. 16. International law, the sharia and international terrorism : a critical assessment of the role of Pakistan in the 'war on terror' / Javaid Rehman. PART SIX:INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES:. 17. Prohibited discrimination in international human rights law / Dinah Shelton. 18. Freedom of expression and the protection of private life in the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights : a field of tension / Christos Rozakis. 19. European human rights law and Turkey's violations in the occupied areas of Cyprus / Van Coufoudakis. 20. Beyond the duty to protect : expanding accountability and responsibilities of the state in combating human trafficking / Roza Pati. 21. The United Nations declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples / Siegfried Wiessner. 22. Indigenous peoples' rights to their natural resources / Erika-Irene Daes. PART SEVEN: HUMAN RIGHTS:DIVERSE CHALLENGES AHEAD:. 23. Inside/outside : women and the international human rights system / Hilary Charlesworth. 24. Harmonising the individual protection regime : some reflections on the relationship between human rights and international humanitarian law in the light of the right to life / Vera Gowlland-Debbas. 25. The viability of a convention for the protection of internally displaced persons / Fausto Pocar. 26. Les droits des victimes des actes terroristes / Emmanuel Decaux. 27. The United Nations and drug policy : towards a human rights-based approach / Damon Barrett and Manfred Nowak. PART EIGHT:DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW OF STATE RESPONSIBILITY:. 28. La protection diplomatique : du standard minimum de traitement des e´trangers aux droits de l'homme / Mohamed Bennouna. 29. State responsibility for international crimes : a review of principles of reparation / Andre´ Nollkaemper. 30. La legitime defense a-t-elle sa place dans un code sur la responsabilite´ internationale? / Theodore Christakis and Karine Bannelier. PART NINE: CONSOLIDATING INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW:. 31. Defining genocide / William Schabas. 32. Crimes against humanity in contemporary international law / Valentin Bou. 33. Restoring the rule of law : ending official elite impunity for international crimes / Jordan Paust. 34. L'exercice de la competence de la Cour penale internationale a'l'e´gard des crimes commis au Darfour / Djamchid Momtaz. PART TEN: INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE GLOBAL COMMONS:. 35. De la souverainete´ a` la coope´ration : l'e´mergence d'inte´re^ts collectifs / Umberto Leanza. 36. Interet collectif, lutte contre les changements climatiques et le défi de l'universalite´ / Laurence Boisson de Chazournes and Katerina Varfi. 37. The implications of the principle of sustainable development in international environmental law / Jose´ Juste-Ruiz. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ICESCR; ICC statute; ICCPR; UDHR; AMR; Framework convention on climate change; Kyoto protocol; Dayton peace agreement; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; UN trafficking protocol; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Johannes declaration of the world summit on sustainable development; |
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38. | Yarwood, Lisa : State accountability under international law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph State accountability under international law : holding states accountable for a breach of jus cogens norms / Yarwood, Lisa, xvi, 182 p.. - new York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-57783-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction 1. The Elements of State Accountability. 2. State Accountability as a Conceptual Framework. 3. The Relationship between State Accountability and Three Relevant Doctrines of International Law. 4. Juridical Support for State Accountability under the Doctrine of State Responsibility. 5. State Accountability in State Practice Conclusion INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Montevideo convention; ECHR; Genocide convention; Kyoto protocol; CRC; ICESCR; ICCPR; |
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39. | Sadat, Leila Nadya : Forging a convention for crimes against humanity, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Forging a convention for crimes against humanity / Sadat, Leila Nadya, xxviii, 565 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-521-11648-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Crimes against humanity and the responsibility to protect Gareth Evans 2. History of efforts to codify crimes against humanity: from the charter of Nuremberg to the statute of Rome Roger S. Clark 3. The universal repression of crimes against humanity before national jurisdictions: the need for a treaty-based obligation to prosecute Payam Akhavan 4. Revisiting the architecture of crimes against humanity: almost a century in the making with gaps and ambiguities remaining – the need for a specialized convention M. Cherif Bassiouni 5. The bright red thread: the politics of international criminal law – the West African experience – a case study: operation justice in Sierra Leone David Crane 6. Gender-based crimes against humanity Valerie Oosterveld 7. 'Chapeau elements' of crimes against humanity in the jurisprudence of the United Nations ad hoc tribunals Göran Sluiter 8. The definition of crimes against humanity and the question of a 'policy' element Guénaël Mettraux 9. Ethnic cleansing as euphemism, metaphor, criminology and law John Hagan and Todd J. Haugh 10. Immunities and amnesties Diane Orentlicher 11. Modes of participation Elies van Sliedregt 12. Terrorism and crimes against humanity Michael P. Scharf and Michael A. Newton 13. Crimes against humanity and the international criminal court Kai Ambos 14. Crimes against humanity and the responsibility to protect David Scheffer 15. Re-enforcing enforcement in a specialized convention on crimes against humanity: inter-state cooperation, mutual legal assistance, and the aut dedere aut judicare obligation Laura M. Olson 16. Why the world needs an international convention on crimes against humanity Gregory H. Stanton INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CAT; Genocide convention; ICC statute; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; CERD; Convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; Terrorist financing convention; Apartheid convention; Terrorist bombing convention; ICCPR; ICTR statute; Worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182);
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item5759557/?site_locale=en_GB |
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40. | Shue, Henry (ed.) : Preemption, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Preemption : military action and moral justification / Shue, Henry (ed.) ; Rodin, David, 267 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-956599-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Henry Shue and David Rodin: Introduction. 1: Hew Strachan: Preemption and Prevention in Historical Perspective. 2: Marc Trachtenberg: Preventive War and U.S. Foreign Policy. 3: Suzanne Uniacke: On Getting One's Retaliation in First. 4: Neta C. Crawford: The False Promise of Collective Security Through Preventive War. 5: Allen Buchanan: Justifying Preventive War. 6: David Rodin: The Problem with Prevention. 7: David Luban: Preventive War and Human Rights. 8: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong: Preventive War - What Is It Good For?. 9: Henry Shue: What Would A Justified Preventive Military Attack Look Like? INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter;
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199565993.do?keyword=preemption+military&sortby=bestMatches |
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41. | Schmitt, Michael N. (Gen.ed.) : Yearbook of international humanitarian law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Yearbook of international humanitarian law : volume 13, 2010 / Schmitt, Michael N. (Gen.ed.), xxiv, 742 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2011. - ISSN 1389-1359 ISBN 978-90-6704-810-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: ARTICLES:. 1. Who may be killed? Anwar al-Awlaki as a case study in the international legal regulation of lethal force, by Robert Chesney. 2. Adjudicating armed conflict in domestic courts: The experience of Israel’s Supreme Court, by Galit Raguan. 3. Counter-insurgency operations in Afghanistan. What about the ‘jus in bellum’ and the ‘jus in bello’: is the law still accurate?, by Chris De Cock. 4. Civilian intelligence agencies and the use of armed drones, by Ian Henderson. 5. International humanitarian law and bombing campaigns: legitimate military objectives and excessive collateral damage, by Christine Byron. 6. The law of armed conflict and international human rights law – some paradigmatic differences and operational implications, by Rob McLaughlin. 7. Unlawful presence of protected persons in occupied territory? An analysis of Israel’s permit regime and expulsions from the West Bank under the law of occupations, by Alon Margalit and Sarah Hibblin. PART II: CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS:. 8. Year in review, by Louise Arimatsu and Mohbuba Choudhury. 9. Drone attacks under the jus ad bellum and jus in bello: clearing the fog of law, by Michael N. Schmidt. 10. Domestic, legal or other proceedings undertaken by both the government of Israel and the Palestinian side, by Ivana Vuco. 11. Poison, gas and expanding bullets: the extension of the list of prohibited weapons at the Review Conference of the International Criminal Court in Kampala, by Robin Geiss. 12. The US Department of Defense Law of War Manual – an update, by Stephanie Carvin. PART III: FOCUS TOPIC: The Gaza Blockade:. 13. Rule selection in the case of Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza: Law of naval warfare or law of the sea?, by James Kraska. 14. The Gaza freedom flotilla and international law, by Andrew Sanger. PART IV: CORRESPONDENT'S REPORTS:. 15. A guide to state practice concerning international humanitarian law, compiled by Tim McCormack. PART V: DOCUMENTATION:. 16. Classification Scheme. 17. Bibliography 2010. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CWC; Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings; CAT; Convention on the law of the sea; Convention on the prohibition of the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and on their destruction; CCW; Refugee convention; CRC; CRC-OP; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Hague conventions; ICCPR; Nuremberg charter; LIBRARY LOCATION: S Yearbook |
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42. | Fisher, Kirsten J. : Moral accountability and international criminal law , 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Moral accountability and international criminal law : holding agents of atrocity accountable to the World / Fisher, Kirsten J., xiv, 208 p.. - Oxon : Routledge, 2012. ISBN 978-0-415-67198-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The Distinct Domain of International Criminal Law. 2. International Crimes. 3. The Expressive Value of Judgement and Punishment. 4. Challenges of Individual Responsibility within Collective Wrongs. 5. Identifying Liability, Fair Labeling and ICL Offenses. 6. Complementarity and the Detriments of Universal Jurisdiction. 7. Evaluating Judicial Mechanisms. 8. Retributive Justice as Culturally Insensitive? 9. Collective Responsibility and Collective Punishment. CONCLUSION INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Cambodia / Canada / China / Chile / France / Iraq / Israel / Japan / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / USSR / Spain / Uganda / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; ICCPR; London charter; ICC statute; ICTY statute; ICJ statute; UDHR; ECHR; |
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43. | Kalshoven, Frits : Constraints on the waging of war, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Constraints on the waging of war : an introduction to international humanitarian law / Kalshoven, Frits ; Zegveld, Liesbeth, xi, 295 s.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-1-107-60032-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Introduction. 2. The main currents: the Hague, Geneva, New York. 3. The law before the Protocols of 1977. 4. The Protocols of 1977. 5. Post-1977 developments. 6. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Ottawa convention; Convention on the prohibition of the development, production and stockpiling of bacteriological (biological) and toxin weapons and on their destruction; Dublin convention; CRC; ECHR; CCW protocol; AMR; ICC statute; |
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44. | Koskenniemi, Martti : The politics of international law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The politics of international law / Koskenniemi, Martti, xv, 371 p.. - Oxford : Hart, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84113-939-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: The Politics of International Law:. 1. Between Apology to Utopia: The Politics of International Law 2. The Politics of International Law – 20 Years Later. Part II: The Law and Politics of Collective Security:. 3. The Place of Law in Collective Security. 4. ‘The Lady Doth Protest Too Much’: Kosovo, and the Turn to Ethics in International Law. PART III: The Politics of Human Rights:. 5. The Effect of Rights on Political Culture. 6. Human Rights, Politics and Love. PART IV: Limits and Possibilities of International Law. 7. Between Impunity and Show Trials. 8. Faith, Identity, and the Killing of the Innocent: International Lawyers and Nuclear Weapons. 9. International Law and Hegemony: a Reconfiguration. 10. What is International Law For?. PART V: The Spirit of International Law:. 11. Between Commitment and Cynicism: Outline for a Theory of International Law as Practice. 12. Style as Method: Letter to the Editors of the Symposium. 13. Miserable Comforters: International Relations as New Natural Law. 14. The Fate of Public International Law: Between Technique and Politics. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UN charter; Cartagena protocol; Charter of Paris; CRC; ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; Framework convention on climate change, Treaty of Lisbon; Kyoto protocol; Montreal convention against aerial terrorism; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Convention on the law of the sea;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841139395 |
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45. | Dinstein, Yoram : War, aggression and self-defence, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph War, aggression and self-defence / Dinstein, Yoram. - 5th. ed.., xxxii, 375 p. . - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-1-107-40145-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. PART I. The Legal Nature of War:. 1. What is war?. 2. The course of war. PART II. The Illegality of War: 3. A historical perspective of the legal status of war. 4. The contemporary prohibition of the use of inter-state force. 5. The crime of aggression. 6. Controversial consequences of the change in the legal status of war. PART III. Exceptions to the Prohibition of the Use of Inter-State Force: 7. The concept of self-defence. 8. The modalities of individual self-defence. 9. Collective self-defence. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aaland Islands / Afghanistan / Argentina / Albania / Australia / Austria / belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Bulgaria / Burundi / Cambodia / Canada / Chile / China / Colombia / Congo / Croatia / Cyprus / Czechoslovakia / Egypt / Eritrea / Falkland Islands / France / Georgia / Germany / Guatemala / Haiti / Hungary / Iceland / Israel / Italy / Japan / Jordan / Kenya / Kuwait / Lebanon / Liberia / Libya / Netherlands / Nicaragua / Norway / Pakistan / Portugal / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / USSR / Sudan / Switzerland / Syria / Tanzania / Turkey / Uganda / USA / USSR / Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Draft code of crimes against the peace and security of mankind; Nuremberg charter; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB SHELF CODE: KB
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item6476733/?site_locale=en_GB |
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46. | Wilmshurst, Elizabeth : International law and the classification of conflicts, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law and the classification of conflicts / Wilmshurst, Elizabeth, xxxix, 531 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-965775-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: 1: Elizabeth Wilmshurst: Introduction. 2. The nature of war and the character of contemporary armed conflict. 3. Classification of armed conflicts: relevant legal concepts. 4. Conflict classification and the law applicable to detention and the use of force. PART II : 5.: Steven Haines: Northern Ireland 1968-1998. 6. Louise Arimatsu: The Democratic Republic of the Congo 1993-2010. 7. Felicity Szesnat and Annie R. Bird: Colombia. 8. Francoise J. Hampson: Afghanistan 2001-2010. 9. Iain scobbie: Gaza. 10. Philip Leach: South Ossetia (2008). 11. Michael N. Schmitt: Iraq (2003 onwards). 12. Iain Scobbie : Lebanon 2006. 13. Noam Lubell: The war (?) agianst Al-Qaeda. 14. Michael N. Schmitt: Classification in future conflict. PART III: Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Colombia / Germany / Israel / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; ACHPR; AMR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; CAT; CEDAW; Ottawa convention; Refugee convention; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR; ICC statute; ICTY statute; |
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47. | Khan, Karim A. A. : Archbold international criminal courts, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Archbold international criminal courts : practice, procedure & evidence / Khan, Karim A. A. ; Dixon, Rodney ; Fulford, Adrian, clxiii, 1684 p.. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2009. ISBN 9-781847-037923 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Establishment and Jurisdiction of the courts and sources of law. 2. Structure of the courts. 3. Powers of the Courts. 4. Principles of Interpretation. 5. Indictments. 6. Pre-trial Procedure. 7. Trial Procedure. 8. Rules of Evidence. 9. Forms of Participation in Offences. 10. War crimes. 11. Genocide. 12. Crimes of Aggression. 13. Contempt, Offences against the Administration of Justice and Removal from office. 14. Defences and procedural bars of jurisdiction. 15. Sentencing, Compensation, restitution & imprisonment. 16. Appeals and Reviews. 17. Legal Aid and Defence Counsel Matter. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; AMR; CAT; CRC; ECHR; CERD; Nuremberg charter; ICC statute; ICTR statute; ICJ statute; ICTY statute; Statute for the Special Court for Sierra Leone; UN charter; |
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48. | Orakhelashvili, Alexander (ed.) : Research handbook on the theory and history of international law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Research handbook on the theory and history of international law / Orakhelashvili, Alexander (ed.) - (Research handbooks in international law), xi, 543 p.. - Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84844-354-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: THE ESSENCE AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY:. 1. The Relevance of Theory and History – The Essence and Origins of International Law, by Alexander Orakhelashvili. 2. Early-Modern Scholarship on International Law, by Alain Wijffels. 3. Natural Law and the Law of Nations, by Patrick Capps. 4. The Origins of Consensual Positivism – Pufendorf, Wolff and Vattel, by Alexander Orakhelashvili. 5. The Transformation of International Law in the 19th Century, by Amnon Lev. 6. Hans Kelsen’s Place in International Legal Theory, by Jörg Kammerhofer. 7. ‘The Holiness of the Heart’s Affection’: Philip Allott’s Theory of Social Idealism, by Iain Scobbie. PART II: THEMATIC ASPECTS OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY:. 8. International Human Rights Law Theory, by Frédéric Mégret. 9. The Philosophy of International Criminal Law, by Robert Cryer. 10. International Law and EU Law: Between Asymmetric Constitutionalisation and Fragmentation, by Katja S. Ziegler. 11. International Law, International Politics and Ideology, by Alexander Orakhelashvili. PART III: HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 12. Periodization and International Law, by William E. Butler. 13. Acculturation through the Middle Ages: The Islamic Law of Nations and its Place in the History of International Law, by Jean Allain. 14. The Classical Law of Nations (1500–1800), by Randall Lesaffer. 15. The 19th-Century Life of International Law, by Alexander Orakhelashvili. 16. International Law between Universality and Regional Fragmentation. The Historical Case of Russia, by Lauri Mälksoo. 17. International Law in the 20th Century, by Carlo Focarelli. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; Arab convention on the suppression of terrorism; ICCPR; ECHR; Kyoto protocol; Geneva conventions; UN charter; UNCLOS; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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49. | Eide, Asbjorn (ed.) : Making peoples heard, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Making peoples heard : essays on human rights in honour of Gudmundur Alfredsson / Eide, Asbjorn (ed.) ; Möller, Jakob Th. ; Ziemele, Ineta, xxix, 643 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2011. ISBN 978-9004-19191-4 LANGUAGE: ENG, ICE ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART 1: THE RIGHT TO PEACE:. 1. milestones in the development of international humanitarian law, by Daniel Thürer. 2. Post-war American international law scepticism: the International Criminal Court, Stockholm 1924, by Mark Weston Janis. 3. Peace as a human right: the Jus cogens prohibition of aggression, by Alfred de Zayas. 4. The human right to peace, by William A. Schabas. 5. Security and human rights ain the regulation of private military companies: the role of the home state, by Francesco Fransioni. PART 2: THE UNITED NATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS:. 6. What makes democracy good, by Lyal S. Sunga. 7. Is the United Nations Human Rights Council living up to the international coummunity's expectations?, by Markus G. Schmidt. 8. The Human Rights Council: the perennial struggle between realism and idealism , by Bertrand G. Ramcharan. 9. Eight UN petitions procedure: a comparative analysis, by Jakob Th. Möller. 10. The legal status of views adopted by the Human Rights Committee - from genesis to adoption of general comment no. 33, by Geir Ulfstein. 11. Winter Break 2010: A week in the life of a Special rapporteur, by Martin Scheinin. 12. Legal and judicial shortcomings of the surrogate state of "UNMIKKISTAN", by Margret Heineksdottir. 13. The right to inclusive education for children with disabilities - innovations in the CRPD, by Oddny Mjöll Arnardottir. PART 3: HUMAN RIGHTS AT THE REGIONAL LEVEL:. 14. The Council of Europe: a champion in monitoring implementation of human rights standards?, by Petter F. Wille. 15. Flexibilising the modes of amending the European convention on human rights: an idea for a 'statute' for the European Court, by Krysztof Drzewicki. 16. Strengtheing of the principle of subsidiarity of the European convention on human rights, by Björg Thorarensen. 17. Presumtion of convention compliance, by David Por Björgvinsson. 18. The right to adequate judicial reasoning, by Ragnar Adalsteinsson. 19. Dialogue between states and international human rights monitoring organs - especially the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance, by Lauri Hannikainen. 20. How old are you? Age discrimination and EU law, by Allan Rosas. 21. NHRIs in the European Union: status quo vadis?, by Morten Kjaerum and Jonas Grimheden. 22. Selected examples of the contemporary practice of the Inter-American system in confronting grave violations of human rights: United States and Colombia, by Diego Rodriguez-Pinzon. PART 4: INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND MINORITIES:. 23. Prevention of discrimination, protection of minorities and the rights of indigenous peoples: challenges and choices, by Asbjorn Eide. 24. Minority protection in the African system of human rights, by Michelo Hansungule. 25. Indigenous peoples on the international scene: a personal reminiscene, by Lee Swepston. 26. Indigenous peoples and the right to development, by Rainer Hofmann and Juri Alistair Gauthier. 27. Principal problems regarding indigenous land rights and recent endeavours to resolve them, by Erica-Irene A. Daes. 28. Traditional knowledge of indigenous peoples: preserve or protect? That's the question, by Mpazi Sinjela. 29. Redefining sovereignty and self-determination throughg a declaration of sovereignty: the Inuit way of defining the parameters for future Arctic governance, by Timo Koivurova. PART 5: HUMAN RIGHTS IN NATIONAL PRACTICES:. 30. Compliance with the views of the UN Human Rights Committee and the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in Iceland, by Gudrun Gauksdottir and Thordis Ingadottir. 31. Did lack of democratic governance contribute to the recent collapse of the Icelandic banking system (Summary in English), by Eirikur Tomasson. 32. "Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom": constitutional principles and preceding causes of the crash in Iceland, by Herdis Thorgeirsdottir. 33. The constitutionalism of the Republic of Iceland and the role and status of the President, by august por Arnason. 34. The hundred-year journey of the concept of human rights in China, by Xu Xianming. 35. Article 17 of China's regional national autonomy law: its implementation andimplications, by MAria Lundberg and Zhou Yong. 36. Enforcement of economic, social and cultural rights at national level: the Indian practice, by Manoj Kumar Sinha. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICC statute; ICCPR-20; ICCPR-OP; ICESCR; CERD; CAT; CEDAW; ECHR; CRPD; EU charter of fundamental rights; TFEU; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
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50. | Keane, David (ed.) : The challenge of human rights, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The challenge of human rights : past, present and future / Keane, David (ed.) ; McDermott, Yvonne - Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar, 2012. ISBN 978-0-85793-900-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction, by David Keane and Yvonne McDermott. 1. The Right to a Social and International Order for the Realization of Human Rights: Article 28 of the Universal Declaration and International Cooperation, by Josh Curtis and Shane Darcy. 2. Freedom from Fear and the Human Right to Peace, by William A. Schabas. 3. The Universality of War: Jus ad Bellum and the Right to Peace in Non-International Armed Conflicts, by Kjell Anderson. 4. UNESCO and the Right to Peace, by David Keane. 5. The Right to Resist Reconsidered, by Shannonbrooke Murphy. 6. Forensic Science, International Criminal Law and the Duties Towards Persons Killed in War, by Éadaoin O’Brien. 7. Forgotten Rights: Consequences of the Israeli Occupation of the Golan Heights, by Ray Murphy. 8. Forging a Convention for Crimes Against Humanity, by Leila Nadya Sadat. 9. Doublespeak and Double Standards: Does the Jurisprudence on Retrial Following Acquittal under International Criminal Law Spell the End of the Double Jeopardy Rule?, by Yvonne McDermott. 10. Third World Approaches to International Law and the Ghosts of Apartheid, by John Reynolds. 11. Exploitation Rebranded: How International Law Sold Slavery as Forced Labour, by Nicholas McGeehan. 12. Between the Wars – the Refugee Convention of 1933: A Contemporary Analysis, by Peter Fitzmaurice. 13. Drafter Decision-making in International Human Rights Treaties, by Daragh McGreal. 14. Free and Fair Elections for Some? The Potential for Voting Rights for Under-18s, by Aoife Daly. 15. Cultural Rights: A New Era, by Majella Ní Chríocháin. 16. Intellectual Property: A Human (Not Corporate) Right, by Megan M. Carpenter. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ACHPR; AMR; CAT; ICESCR; ICCPR; CRC; CERD; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ECHR; UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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51. | Spijkers, Otto : The United Nations, the evolution of global values and international law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The United Nations, the evolution of global values and international law / Spijkers, Otto - (School of human rights research series ; vol. 47), xii, 525 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2011. ISBN 978-1-78068-036-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART 1 Chapter I Introduction. Chapter II Global Values. Chapter III United Nations Decision Making as Value-based Decision Making. PART 2 147 Chapter IV Peace and Security. Chapter V Social Progress and Development. Chapter VI Human Dignity. Chapter VII The Self-determination of Peoples. Chapter VIII Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Atlantic charter; Moscow declaration; Declaration on friendly relations; |
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52. | Stahn, Carsten (ed.) : The International Criminal Court and complementarity, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The International Criminal Court and complementarity : from theory to practice : volume I-II / Stahn, Carsten (ed.) ; Zeidy, Mohames M., xxv, 682 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-521-76387-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. VOLUME 1: Introduction: bridge over troubled waters? Complementarity themes and debates in context, by Carsten Stahn. PART I: GENERAL REFLECTIONS:. 1. A positive approach to complementarity: the impact of the Office of the Prosecutor, by Luis Moreno-Ocampo. 2. Justice and prevention, by Juan E. Mendez. 3. Proactive complementarity: a registrar's perspective and plans, by Silvana Arbia and Giovanni Bassy. Part II: ORIGIN AND GENESIS OF COMPLEMETARITY:. 4. The genesis of complementarity, by Mohamed M. El Zeidy. 5. Reflections on complementarity at the Rome Conference and beyond, by Mauro Politi. 6. The rise and fall of complementarity, by William A. Scahabas. Part III: ANALYTICAL DIMENSIONS OF COMPLEMENTARITY:. 7. Complementarity as global governance, by Christoph Burchard. 8. Policy through complementarity: the atrocity trial as justice, by Mark A. Drumbl. 9. Taking complementarity seriously: on the sense and sensibility of 'classical', 'positive' and 'negative' complementarity, by Carsten Stahn. 10. International criminal justice in the era of failed states: the ICC and the self-referral debate, by Payam Akhavan. 11. The quest for constructive complementarity, by Michael A. Newton. 12. Reframing positive complementarity: reflections on the first decade and insights from the US federal criminal justice system, by William W. Burke-White. 13. Too much of a good thing? Implementation and the uses of complementarity, by Frederic Megret. PART IV: INTERPRETATION AND APPLICATION:. 14. The application of the principle of complementarity to the decision of where to open an investigation: the admissibility of 'situations', by Hector Olasolo and Enrique Carnero-Rojo. 15. Situations and case: defining the parameters, by Rod Rastan. 16. The inaction controversy: neglected words and new opportunities, by Darryl Robinson. 17. Admissibility procedure, by Jo Stigen. 18. The evolution of the ICC jurisprudence on admissibility, by Ben Batros. 19. Interpretative gravity under the ICC statute: identifying common gravity criteria, by Ignaz Stegmiller. 20. Complementarity and burden allocation, by Megan A. Fairlie and Joseph Powderly. Volume 2:. 21. States' obligations to investigate and prosecute perpetrators of international crimes: the perspective of the European Court of Human Rights, by Harmen van der Wilt. 22. The law and policy of complementarity in relation to 'criminal proceedings' carried out by non-state organized armed groups, by Jann K. Kleffner. 23. Complementarity and the crime of aggression, by Roger S. Clark. 24. Complementarity and alternative forms of justice: a new test for ICC admissibility, by Gregory S. Gordon. 25. Complementarity and 'reverse cooperation', by Frederica Gioia. 26. In the hands of the state: implementing legislation and complementarity, by Olympia Bekou. Part V. COMPLEMENTARITY IN PERSPECTIVE:. 27. Horizontal complementarity, by Cedric Rygnaert. 28. The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia ('ICTY') and the transfer of cases and materials to national judicial authorities: lessons in complementarity, by David Tolbert and Aleksandar Kontic. 29. Positive complementarity in practice: ICTY rule 11bis and the use of the tribunal's evidence in the Srebrenica trials before the Bosnian War Crimes Chamber, by Fidelma Donlon. 30. Complementarity of procedures: how to avoid reinventing the wheel, by Tarik Abdulhak. PART VI: COMPLEMENTARITY IN PRACTICE:. 31. Making complementarity work: maximising the limited role of the prosecutor, by Paul F. Seils. 32. Positive complementarity in action, by Christopher K. Hall. 33. Complementarity and the construction of national ability, by Morten Bergsmo, Olympia Bekou and Annika Jones. 34. The Colombian Peace Process (Law 975 of 2005) and the ICC's principle of complementarity, by Kai Ambos. 35. Darfur: complementarity as the drafters intended?, by Robert Cryer. 36. Complementarity in Uganda: domestic diversity or international imposition?, by Sarah Nouwen. 37. Courts, conflict and complementarity in Uganda, by Marieke Wierda and Michael Otim. 38. Chasing cases: the ICC and the politics of state referral in the Democratic RRepubli cof the Congo and Uganda, by Phil Clark. 39. A problem, not a solution: complementarity in the Central African Republic and Democratic Republic of Congo, by Marlies Glasius. 40. Complementarity and the impact of the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court in Kenya, by Christine Alai and Njonjo Mue. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan NOTE (GENERAL): CAT; CEDAW; CERD; ECHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Draft code of crimes against the peace and security of mankind; UN charter; Genocide convention;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item6446961/?site_locale=en_GB |
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53. | Schabas, William : Unimaginable atrocities, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Unimaginable atrocities : justice, politics and rights at the war crimes tribunals / Schabas, William, 232 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-965307-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction:. 1: 'Unimaginable Atrocities': Identifying International Crimes. 2: Nullum Crimen Sine Lege. 3: Victors' Justice? Selecting Targets for Prosecution. 4: The Genocide Mystique. 5: Mens Rea, Actus Reus, and the Role of the State. 6: History, International Justice, and the Right to Truth. 7: No Peace Without Justice? The Amnesty Quandary. 8: Crimes Against Peace INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Canada / Cambodia / Darfur / Iraq / Israel / Kenya / Liberia / Norway / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / Spain / Sudan / Uganda / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ICCPR; UN charter; ICC statute; ICTR statute; CAT; UDHR; |
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54. | Evans, Malcolm (ed.) : The international responsibility of the European Union, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The international responsibility of the European Union : European and international perspectives / Evans, Malcolm (ed.) ; Koutrakos, Panos, ix, 372 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2013. ISBN 978-1-84946-328-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: SETTING THE SCENE. PART II: CURRENT APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY. PART III: TOOLS FOR DETERMINING RESPONSIBILITY. PART IV: RESPONSIBILITY OF THE EU IN SUSBTANTIVE POLICY AREA. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Belarus / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Canada / Chile / China / Congo / Cyprus / Czech Republic / East Timor / France / Germany / Iraq / Ireland / Israel / Libya / Liberia / Malta / Netherlands / Poland / Portugal / Russian Federation / Serbia / singapore / USSR / Spain / Tanzania / Uganda / Ukraine / United Kingdom / USA / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Biodiversity convention; Cartagena protocol on biosafety; Copenhagen accord; ECHR; European convention on protection of farming animals; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; Articles on the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts (ILC); Kyoto protocol; Maastricht treaty; Montreal convention on carriage by air; Lugano convention; Framework convention on climate change; Vienna convention for the protection of the ozone layer; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781849463287 |
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55. | Crawford, James : Brownlie's principles of public international law, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Brownlie's principles of public international law / Crawford, James. - 8th. ed.., lxxx, 803 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-969969-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I - Preliminary Topics:. 1: Introduction. 2: The Sources of International Law. 3: The Relations of International Law and National Law. PART II - Personality and Recognition:. 4: Subjects of International Law. 5: Creation and Incidence of Statehood. 6: Recognition of States and Governments. 7: International Organizations. PART III - Territorial Sovereignty:. 8: Forms of Governmental Authority over Territory. 9: Acquisition and Transfer of Territorial Sovereignty. 10: Status of Territory: Further Problems. PART IV - Law of the Sea:. 11: The Territorial Sea and Other Maritime Zones. 12: Maritime Delimitation and Associated Questions. 13: Maritime Transit and the Regime of the High Seas. PART V - The Environment and Natural Resources:. 14: Common Spaces and Co-operation in the Use of Natural Resources. 15: Legal Aspects of the Protection of the Environment. PART VI - International Transactions:. 16: The Law of Treaties. 17: Diplomatic and Consular Relations. 18: Unilateral Acts; Estoppel. 19: Succession to Rights and Duties. PART VII - State Jurisdiction:. 20: Sovereignty and Equality of States. 21: Jurisdictional Competence. 22: Privileges and Immunities of Foreign States. PART VIII - Nationality and Related Concepts:. 23: The Relations of Nationality. 24: Nationality of Corporations and Assets. PART IX - The Law of Responsibility:. 25: The Conditions for International Responsibility. 26: Consequences of an Internationally Wrongful Act. 27: Multilateral Public Order and Issues of Responsibility. PART X - The Protection of Individuals and Groups:. 28: The International Minimum Standard: Persons and Property. 29: International Human Rights. 30: International Criminal Justice. PART XI - Disputes:. 31: The Claims Process. 32: Third-Party Settlement of International Disputes. 33: The Use or Threat of Force by States. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; UN charter; CEDAW; Convention relating to the status of stateless persons; Espoo convention; ECHR; European convention on nationality; European convention on state immunity; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; Refugee convention; Convention concerning indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); CERD; ICJ status; ICCPR; ICESCR; ICC statute; Kyoto protocol; OAS charter; CAT; Treaty of peace; TEU; Framework convention on climate change; UDHR; Vienna convention on diplomatic relations; Vienna convention on the law of treaties;
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199654178.do#.UbBwfXeAk_x |
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56. | McDougall, Carrie : The crime of aggression under the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The crime of aggression under the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court / McDougall, Carrie - (Cambridge studies in international and comparative law), xxxii, 382 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-1-107-01109-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents 1. The crime of aggression under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: an introduction 2. Criminalising aggression 3. An act of aggression: by any other name 4. The elevation of acts of aggression to the state act element of the crime of aggression 5. The individual conduct elements of the crime 6. The Court's jurisdiction over the crime of aggression 7. 2017 and beyond. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UN charter; ICCPR; IMT charter; ICC statute;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item7074062/?site_locale=en_GB |
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57. | Cassese, A. and [five others] : Cassese's international criminal law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Cassese's international criminal law / Cassese, A. and [five others]. - rev. 3rd. ed.., lii, 414 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-0-19-969492-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: INTRODUCTION:. 1: Fundamentals of international criminal law. 2: The principle of legality. 3: The elements of international crimes, in particular the mental element. PART II: SUBSTANTIVE CRIMINAL LAW:. SECTION I: INTERNATIONAL CRIMES:. 4: War crimes. 5: Crimes against humanity. 6: Genocide. 7: Torture and aggression. 8: Terrorism. SECTION II: MODES OF CRIMINAL LIABILITY:. 9: Perpetration: in particular joint and indirect perpetration. 10: Omission liability and superior responsibility. 11: Other modes of criminal liability and inchoate crimes. SECTION III: CIRCUMSTANCES EXCLUDING CRIMINAL LIABILITY:. 12: Justifications and excuses. 13: Obedience to superior orders and official capacity. PART III: PROSECUTION AND PUNISHMENT:. SECTION I: INTERNATIONAL AND NATIONAL CRIMINAL JURISDICTION:. 14: International criminal courts. 15: The repression of international crimes in domestic jurisdictions. 16: International versus national jurisdiction. 17: Legal impediments to the exercise of criminal jurisdiction. SECTION II: INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIALS:. 18: The adoption of the essential features of the adversarial system. 19: General principles governing international criminal trials. 20: Investigation and trial before international criminal courts. 21: Appeals and enforcements. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Armenia / Belgium / Bosnia and Herzegovina / Brazil / Cambodia / Canada / China / Ethiopia / France / Germany / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Latvia / Lebanon / Lithuania / Macedonia / Moldoba / Montenegro / Norway / Ottoman / Paraguay / Peru / Poland / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Slovenia / South Africa / Spain / Sweden / Switzerland / Tajikistan / Ukraine / United Kingdom / USA / Uruguay / Uzbekistan / Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): OAS charter; Dayton peace agreement; Hague conventions; Treaty of Versailles; London agreement; UN charter; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; ACHPR; CAT; Schengen convention; ILC draft code of crimes against peace and security of mankind; LIBRARY LOCATION: KB
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199694921.do#.Ubg0_HeAk_w |
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58. | Boas, Gideon (ed.) : International criminal justice, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal justice : legitimacy and coherence / Boas, Gideon (ed.) ; Schabas, William A. ; Scharf, Michael, xii, 322 p.. - Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar publ., 2012. ISBN 978-1-78100-559-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. What is International Criminal Justice?, by Gideon Boas. 2. Order in the Courtroom: The Unique Challenge of Maintaining Control of a War Crimes Trial, by Michael P. Scharf. 3. Making War Crimes Trials Work – Balancing Fairness and Expedition, by Iain Bonomy. 4. Applied Rights in International Criminal Law: Defence Counsel and the Right to Disclosure, by Peter Morrissey. 5. Complexities in Prosecuting International Crimes: The ICC Libyan Warrants, by Mark Ierace. 6. International Criminal Justice and the Past, by Gerry Simpson. 7. International Criminal Justice in Historical Context: The Post-Second World War Trials and Modern International Criminal Justice, by Robert Cryer. 8. Terrorism and International Criminal Law: Questions of (in)Coherence and (il)legitimacy, by Ben Saul. 9. The International Criminal Court and the Complexities of International Criminal Justice, by James Potter. 10. Women and International Criminal Law: Steps Forward or Dancing Backwards, by Helen Durham. 11. Have Recent Changes Designed to Benefit Victims of International Crimes Added to the Legitimacy of International Criminal Justice?, by Sam Garkawe. 12. International Criminal Justice and Military Perspectives, by Geoffrey Skillen. INDEX WORDS:
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59. | Herik, Larissa van den (ed.) : The diversification and fragmentation of international criminal law, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The diversification and fragmentation of international criminal law / Herik, Larissa van den (ed.) ; Stahn, Carsten - (Leiden studies on the frontiers of international law ; volume 1), xxiv, 710 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ. , 2012. ISBN 978-90-04-21459-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. Abbreviations; Preface and Acknowledgments. Introduction, by Flavia Lattanzi. Chapter 1: ‘Fragmentation’, Diversification and ‘3D’ Legal Pluralism: International Criminal Law as the Jack-in-the-Box?, by Carsten Stahn & Larissa van den Herik. PART I: INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS OF FRAGMENTATION:. Chapter 2: The Judicial Dialogue between the ICJ and International Criminal Courts on the Question of Immunity, by Rosanne van Alebeek. Chapter 3: Binocular Vision: State Responsibility and Individual Criminal Responsibility for Genocide, by Philippa Webb. Chapter 4: Finding Custom: The ICJ and the International Criminal Courts and Tribunals Compared, by Yeghishe Kirakosyan. Chapter 5 : Human Rights Cases in Sub-regional African Courts: Towards Justice for Victims or Just More Fragmentation?, by Helen Duffy. Chapter 6: Praising the Region: What Might a Complementary Criminal Justice System Learn from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights?, by Cecilia Cristina Naddeo. Chapter 7: The Regionalization of Criminal Law – the Example of European Criminal Law, by Ricardo Pereira. Chapter 8: Alternative Justice Mechanisms, Compliance and Fragmentation of International Law, by Susan Kemp. Chapter 9: Limits of Information-sharing between the International Criminal Court and Truth Commissions, by Eszter Kirs. Chapter 10: Puzzling over Amnesties: Defragmenting the Debate for International Criminal Tribunal, by Dov Jacobs. PART II: FRAGMENTATION OF SUBSTANTIVE LAW:. Chapter 11: Chinese Humanitarian Law and International Humanitarian Law, by Liu Daqun. Chapter 12: Approximatin or Harmonisation as a Result of Implementation of the Rome Statut, by David Donat Cattin. Chapter 13: Fragmentation of the Rome Statute through an Incoherent Jurisdictional Regime for the Crime of Aggression: A Silent Operation, by Deborah Ruiz Verduzco. Chapter 14: Domestic Prosecution of Genocide: Fragmentation or Natural Diversity?, by Cristina Fernández-Pacheco Estrada. Chapter 15: The Rome Statute and Domestic Proceedings for Ordinary Crimes: The (In)Admissibility of Cases before the International Criminal Court, by Beatrice Pisani. Chapter 16: Fragmentation of the Notion of Co-Perpetration in International Criminal Law?, by Chantal Meloni. Chapter 17: The Mens Rea Enigma in the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court, by Mohamed Elewa Badar. Chapter 18: Reception of Common Law in Substantive International Criminal Law, by James L. Bischoff. Chapter 19: The Principle of Complicity under International Law – Its Application to States and Individuals in Cases involving Genocide, Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes, by Erik Kok. PART III: FRAGMENTATION AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE:. Chapter 20: Unifi cation or Fragmentation? Structural Tendencies in International Criminal Procedure, by Mark Klamberg. Chapter 21: Prosecutorial Discretion in International Criminal Justice: Between Fragmentation and Unificatio, by Hitomi Takemura. Chapter 22: Fragmentation in International Criminal Law and the Rights of Victims, by Margaret Burnham. Chapter 23: The Influences of French Law on Appeal Proceedings before the International Criminal Court and the Tribunals, by Xavier Tracol. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CAT; ICCPR; CEDAW; ECHR; TEU; TFEU; Vienna convention on the law of treaties;
URL http://www.brill.com/diversification-and-fragmentation-international-criminal-law |
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60. | Fleck, Dieter (ed.) : The handbook of international humanitarian law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The handbook of international humanitarian law / Fleck, Dieter (ed.). - 3. ed. ., lii, 714 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2013. ISBN 978-0-19-965880-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Dieter Fleck : Introduction. 1: Mary Ellen O'Connell: Historical Development and Legal Basis. 2: Jann K. Kleffner: Scope of Application of International Humanitarian Law. 3: Knut Ipsen: Combatants and Non-Combatants. 4: Stefan Oeter: Means and Methods of Combat. 5: Knut Dörmann and Hans-Peter Gasser: Protection of the Civilian Population. 6: Jann K. Kleffner and Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg: Protection of the Wounded, Sick, and Shipwrecked. 7: Horst Fischer: Protection of Prisoners in Armed Conflict. 8: Nilendra Kumar: Protection of Religious Personnel. 9: Roger O'Keefe: Protection of Cultural Property. 10: Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg: The Law of Armed Conflict at Sea. 11: Michael Bothe: The Law of Neutrality. 12: Dieter Fleck: The Law of Non-International Armed Conflict. 13: Ben F. Klappe: The Law of International Peace Operations. 14: Silja Vöneky: Implementation and Enforcement of International Humanitarian Law. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Eritrea / Ethiopia / Colombia / Germany / Ireland / Israel / Netherlands / Singapore / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Hague conventions; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ECHR; Refugee convention; Convention for the protection of cultural property in the event of armed conflict; ICCPR; ICESCR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; BWC; ACHPR; Convention on the law of the sea; CAT; CRC; CRC-OP; CWC; ICTY statute; Ottawa convention; ICC statute; Dublin convention on cluster munitions; Arab charter of fundamental rights; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB |