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The advancement of international law (Record no. 28811)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 07741nam a2200217Ia 4500
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field OSt
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20201223160914.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 160316s2010 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781847316035
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency .
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 341
Item number LEB
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Leben Charles
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title The advancement of international law
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Oxford
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Hart Publihsing
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2010
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 333p
Dimensions v
365 ## - TRADE PRICE
Price amount Rs. 3,523
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note Contents<br/>PART 1-ADVANCES IN THE TECHNIQUES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW;<br/>Chapter 1;<br/>State Contracts and their Governing Law: A Reappraisal;<br/>State Contracts as New International Legal Acts<br/>State Contracts as Contracts entered into by States as Subjects of Public International Law<br/>State Contracts as Contracts governed by the International Legal Order<br/>Responses to some Objections<br/>On it being Impossible for Contracts between States and Individuals to come within the International<br/>Legal Order<br/>On the Preference Given to Public International Law Rather than Transnational Law for Governing State<br/>Contracts;<br/>Chapter 2;<br/>The International Responsibility of States based on Investment Promotion and Protection Treaties<br/>State Responsibility in the International Legal Order<br/>Characteristics of States' International Responsibility on the Basis of Protection Treaties<br/>Justification of Resource to International Law<br/>State Responsibility on the Basis of Protection Treaties and State Responsibility in Municipal Law<br/>In the Absence of any Contractual Connection between Investor and State<br/>In the Presence of a Contractual Connection between State and Investor and with a Separate Dispute Settlement Clause from that Provided by the Protection Treaty<br/>Chapter 3;<br/>The State's Normative Freedom and the Question of Indirect Expropriation<br/>Indirect Expropriation in International Law<br/>In International Law in General<br/>In International Investment Law<br/>Maintaining the State's Normative Freedom<br/>Results of Case Law<br/>The Prudence of Arbitrators<br/>PART 2;<br/> ADVANCES IN THE THEORETICAL ANALYSIS FO INTERNATIONAL LAW<br/>Chapter 4;<br/>Some Theoretical Reflections on State Contracts<br/>The Concept of State in State Contracts<br/>The Double Personality of the State in Anzilotti<br/>Kelsen's Dismissal of the Double Personality of the State Presented by Anzillotti<br/>The Double Theory of the State in Kelsen<br/>Individuals as Subjects of Public International Law<br/>Definition of the Subject of International Law<br/>Subjects of International Law and 'Legal Communities' of International Law<br/>Objections Raised by the Dualist Doctrine<br/>Relations between Private Persons and their Home State from the Standpoint of International Law<br/>On the Inequality between States and Private Persons<br/>Private Persons bringing Proceedings before International Courts<br/>Dismissal of the Petitio Principii that Individuals can never Bring Proceedings before International Courts<br/>Can Mixed 'Tribunals' be considered International Courts? The Case of ICSID Tribunals<br/>Can 'Mixed' Courts be considered International Courts? The Case of Ad Hoc Tribunals<br/>On the Incapacity of General Principles of Law to Internationalise State Contracts<br/>Lankarani El-Zein's Argument<br/>Dismissal of this Argument<br/>On Stabilisations Clauses in State Contracts<br/>Stabilisation Clauses are Purportedly not Characteristic of a New Category of Contracts<br/>Stabilisation Clauses Purportedly do not Imply the Internationalisation of State Contracts<br/>On the Validity and Efficacy of Stabilisation Clauses<br/>Chapter 5;<br/>Hans Kelsen and the Advancement of International Law<br/>The Nature of International Law<br/>Law in its Own Right<br/>Reprisals and War: Sanctions of Decentralised International Law<br/>Centralisation of International Law: Collective Security and Compulsory Jurisdiction<br/>Changes in International Law: Towards what sort of Civitas Maxima?<br/>Centralisation /Decentralisation of Legal Orders<br/>The International Organisation as a Comparatively Centralised Legal Order and its Relations with the State<br/>The European Union as a Possible Horizon of International Law<br/>Changes in International Law: Internationalised State Contracts and the Status of Private Persons in the<br/>International Legal Order<br/>The Notion of a State Contract<br/>The Possibility of Individuals to be Limited Subjects of International Law<br/>Chapter 6;<br/>The Notion of Civitas Maxima in Kelsen's Work<br/>Civitas Maxima and the Primacy of International Law<br/>Civitas Maxima and Kelsen's Conception of Legal Orders<br/>The World State: Cognitive Postulate or State Stricto Sensu?<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 7;<br/>International Courts in an Interstate Society<br/>The Decisive Criterion for the Existence of an International Legal Order<br/>Law as a System of Justiciable Rules<br/>International Law as a System of Minimally Justiciable Rules<br/>Optional Courts and Mandatory Courts<br/>Mandatory Judgement and Operative Judgement<br/>Judicial Third Party and Political Third Party<br/>International Courts and the Advancement of the International Legal Order<br/>Primacy of the Rules of Law and State Sovereignty<br/>Judicial Interpretation and Self-Interpretation of International Law<br/>Legal Disputes and Political Disputes<br/>The Development of International Law<br/>The End of Anarchy<br/>Chapter 8;<br/>The State within the Meaning of International Law and the State within the Meaning of Municipal Law (On the Theory of the Dual Personality of the State)<br/>The Two Sides or Double Personality of the State<br/>The Two Sides of the State in Classical French and German Doctrines<br/>The Double Personality of the State in Italian Internationalist Doctrine<br/>The Double Personality of the State: Kelsen's Analysis<br/>Ambiguities in Kelsen<br/>The Double Personality of the State in a Normative Conception of Legal Orders: A Proposal<br/>PART 3;<br/>EUROPEAN UNION LAW: INTERNATIONAL LAW SURPASSED OR INTERNATIONAL LAW ADVANCING?<br/>Chapter 9;<br/>On the Legal Nature of the European Communities<br/>Centralisation/Decentralisation of a Legal Order<br/>The Kelsenian Interpretation of Federalism<br/>The European Community: A Relatively Centralised International Legal Order<br/>The Importance of Central Norms<br/>The Existence of a Court to Rule on the Apportionment of Jurisdiction between the Central Order and the<br/>Local Orders<br/>The Direct Applicability of Community Law<br/>The Primacy of Community Law<br/>The International Legal Order/The State Legal Order<br/>Of the Birth of the State<br/>Of the Legal Nature of the Community and its Future Development<br/>Chapter 10;<br/>A Federation of National States or Federal State?<br/>The Reasons for Community Europe's Dysfunctions<br/>Federation and the Constitutional Theory of the State<br/>Confederation of States and Federal State<br/>The Federation (J Fischer) or Federation of Nation State ( J Delors)<br/>Sovereignty and Nation States<br/>Sovereignty<br/>Nation States<br/>The European Federation: Squaring the Circle<br/>Chapter 11;<br/>Is there a European Approach to Human Rights?<br/>Introduction<br/>The West and the Rest: Europe and the Question of the Universality of Human Rights<br/>The European Model of Human Rights: A Concrete Universal<br/>It is Possible to Conceive of the Universal and Human Rights Starting from Other Traditions<br/>The Universal and the Particular in Human Rights<br/>The European Universal and its Relations with other Civilisations<br/>The Universal and the Eternal: The Birth of Universal Human Rights in and through History<br/>Europe and the West: The European (Properly Speaking) Dimension of Human Rights<br/>Birth, Disappearance and Rebirth of Human Rights in Europe<br/>The Enforced Hibernation of the Philosophy of Human Rights in Europe<br/>Barbarity in Europe and the Renewal of the Philosophy and Positive Law of Human Rights<br/>Certain Features of the European Concept of Human Rights<br/>Conclusion;<br/><br/>
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name entry element 1. International Law - History
700 ## - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name
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942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Source of classification or shelving scheme Dewey Decimal Classification
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Withdrawn status Lost status Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Cost, normal purchase price Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Price effective from Koha item type
        . .   30.05.2017 3523.00   341 LEB 26224 30.05.2017 30.05.2017 BOOKs