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Justice in international law

By: Contributor(s):
Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994Description: 630p xiiiISBN:
  • 9780521462846
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 341.520000 SCH
Online resources:
Contents:
Contents Part I. INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE: 1. Reflections on the role of the International Court of Justice 2. Relations between the International Court of Justice and the United Nations 3. Was the capacity to request an advisory opinion wider in the permanent Court of International Justice than it is in the International Justice? 4. Authorising the Secretary-General of the United Nations to request advisory opinions of the International Court of Justice 5. Preliminary rulings by the International Court of Justice at the instance of national courts 6. Chambers of the International Court of Justice formed for particular cases 7. Three cases of fact-finding by the International Court of Justice 8. Indirect aggression in the International Court 9. Human Rights in the World Court Part II. INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION: 10. Arbitration and the exhaustion of local remedies 11. Arbitration and the exhaustion of local remedies revisited 12. Some aspects of international law in arbitration between states and aliens 13. The majority vote of an international arbitral tribunal 14. The prospects for international arbitration: inter-state disputes Part III. UNITED NATIONS: 15. The origins and development of Article 99 of the Charter 16. The international character of the Secretariat of the United Nations 17. Secretary-General and Secretariat 18. A United Nations 'guard' and a United Nations 'legion' 19. Mini-states and a more effective United Nations 20. Article 19 of the Charter of the United Nations: Memorandum of Law 21. The United States assaults the ILO 22. Goldberg variations Part IV. INTERNATIONAL CONTRACTS AND EXPROPRIATION: 23. Report of the Committee on Nationalisation of Property of the American branch of the International Law Association 24. The story of the United Nations Declaration on Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources 25. Speculations on specific performance of a contract between a state and a foreign national 26. On whether the breach by a state of a contract with an alien is a breach of international law 27. Some little-known cases on concessions 28. Commentary on 'Social discipline and the multinational enterprise' and 'security of investment abroad' Part V. AGGRESSION UNDER, COMPLIANCE WITH, AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: 29. The legal effect of resolutions and codes of conduct of the United Nations 30. The United Nations and the challenge of a changing international law 31. What weight to conquest 32. The Brezhnev Doctrine repealed and peaceful co-existence enacted 33. Aggression, intervention and self-defense in modern international law 34. Address and commentary 35. The compliance process and the future of international law 36. Government legal advising in the field of foreign affairs.
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BOOKs BOOKs National Law School Reference REFERENCE SECTION 341.52 SCH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 19683

Contents
Part I. INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE: 1. Reflections on the role of the International Court of Justice
2. Relations between the International Court of Justice and the United Nations
3. Was the capacity to request an advisory opinion wider in the permanent Court of International Justice than it is in the International Justice?
4. Authorising the Secretary-General of the United Nations to request advisory opinions of the International Court of Justice
5. Preliminary rulings by the International Court of Justice at the instance of national courts
6. Chambers of the International Court of Justice formed for particular cases
7. Three cases of fact-finding by the International Court of Justice
8. Indirect aggression in the International Court
9. Human Rights in the World Court
Part II. INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION: 10. Arbitration and the exhaustion of local remedies
11. Arbitration and the exhaustion of local remedies revisited
12. Some aspects of international law in arbitration between states and aliens
13. The majority vote of an international arbitral tribunal
14. The prospects for international arbitration: inter-state disputes
Part III. UNITED NATIONS: 15. The origins and development of Article 99 of the Charter
16. The international character of the Secretariat of the United Nations
17. Secretary-General and Secretariat
18. A United Nations 'guard' and a United Nations 'legion'
19. Mini-states and a more effective United Nations
20. Article 19 of the Charter of the United Nations: Memorandum of Law
21. The United States assaults the ILO
22. Goldberg variations
Part IV. INTERNATIONAL CONTRACTS AND EXPROPRIATION: 23. Report of the Committee on Nationalisation of Property of the American branch of the International Law Association
24. The story of the United Nations Declaration on Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources
25. Speculations on specific performance of a contract between a state and a foreign national
26. On whether the breach by a state of a contract with an alien is a breach of international law
27. Some little-known cases on concessions
28. Commentary on 'Social discipline and the multinational enterprise' and 'security of investment abroad'
Part V. AGGRESSION UNDER, COMPLIANCE WITH, AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: 29. The legal effect of resolutions and codes of conduct of the United Nations
30. The United Nations and the challenge of a changing international law
31. What weight to conquest
32. The Brezhnev Doctrine repealed and peaceful co-existence enacted
33. Aggression, intervention and self-defense in modern international law
34. Address and commentary
35. The compliance process and the future of international law
36. Government legal advising in the field of foreign affairs.

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