
Library Catalogue

| 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 | |
| -- | |
| 942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
| Source of classification or shelving scheme | Dewey Decimal Classification |
| Koha item type | BOOKs |
| 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 |