International Law Sources: Collected Papers: Volume Three
Autor Anthony D'amatoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 ian 2004
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004138346
ISBN-10: 900413834X
Pagini: 386
Dimensiuni: 168 x 245 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
ISBN-10: 900413834X
Pagini: 386
Dimensiuni: 168 x 245 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Recenzii
'My sketch of Grotius fits D’Amato better than any other English-writing international legal scholar today. It is the cumulative effect of D’Amato’s great body of work that warrants attention, now and far into the future.'
Nicholas Onuf.
'The main impression imparted by the volume as a whole is one of jurisprudential coherence and striking originality. It establishes Anthony D’Amato as one of the finest theoretical minds at work on international law issues, and it does so in an engaging manner that gives a reader the pleasure of participating actively in these explorations into the nature and function of international law.'
Richard A. Falk.
Nicholas Onuf.
'The main impression imparted by the volume as a whole is one of jurisprudential coherence and striking originality. It establishes Anthony D’Amato as one of the finest theoretical minds at work on international law issues, and it does so in an engaging manner that gives a reader the pleasure of participating actively in these explorations into the nature and function of international law.'
Richard A. Falk.
Cuprins
Foreword,
Table of Contents,
Preface,
Acknowledgments.
Part I. Sources
1. What ‘Counts as International Law’,
2. Is International Law Really ‘Law’?,
3. Locating Human Rights Within International Law,
4. Is Human Rights Part of Customary Law?,
5.A Seminar on Customary International Law,
6. Trashing Customary Law: The Nicaragua Case,
7. Towards a Systems Perspective on Custom,
8. Is Consensus a Source of International Law?,
9. Special Custom,
10. Is the Publicist a Subsidiary Source?
Part II. The Relation Between Custom and Treaty
11. Early Thoughts on Treaties as a Source of Custom,
12. The Misunderstood Continental Shelf Cases,
13. Updating the Debate on Treaties and Custom
Part III. Non-Source Impacts Upon International Law
14. Positivism and International Law,
15. International Law and Rawls’ Theory of Justice,
16. Can Consent, Estoppel, or Reasonableness Override International Law?,
17. It’s Bird, It’s a Plane, ,It’s Jus Cogens!
Part IV. Applications
18. History of the Terms in Article 2 (4) of the UN Charter,
19. On Genocide,
20. Command Responsibility and the American Campaign against the International Criminal Court,
21.Cybernetics and Cyberspace,
Abbreviations,
Index.
Table of Contents,
Preface,
Acknowledgments.
Part I. Sources
1. What ‘Counts as International Law’,
2. Is International Law Really ‘Law’?,
3. Locating Human Rights Within International Law,
4. Is Human Rights Part of Customary Law?,
5.A Seminar on Customary International Law,
6. Trashing Customary Law: The Nicaragua Case,
7. Towards a Systems Perspective on Custom,
8. Is Consensus a Source of International Law?,
9. Special Custom,
10. Is the Publicist a Subsidiary Source?
Part II. The Relation Between Custom and Treaty
11. Early Thoughts on Treaties as a Source of Custom,
12. The Misunderstood Continental Shelf Cases,
13. Updating the Debate on Treaties and Custom
Part III. Non-Source Impacts Upon International Law
14. Positivism and International Law,
15. International Law and Rawls’ Theory of Justice,
16. Can Consent, Estoppel, or Reasonableness Override International Law?,
17. It’s Bird, It’s a Plane, ,It’s Jus Cogens!
Part IV. Applications
18. History of the Terms in Article 2 (4) of the UN Charter,
19. On Genocide,
20. Command Responsibility and the American Campaign against the International Criminal Court,
21.Cybernetics and Cyberspace,
Abbreviations,
Index.