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Books > Law > International law > General
International Law, Third Edition, offers a rigorous and supportive introduction to public international law for undergraduate and post-graduate readers. The text balances clear, concise discussion with in-depth analysis of international law principles at the international, regional and, where applicable, domestic levels. Offering a conceptual framework that simplifies the complexity of the international legal system, International Law supports learning efficiency and effectiveness, and enables readers to achieve mastery of the subject matter.
In addition to the core material that is addressed in international law curriculae, this third edition work engages with the many developments and topical issues that have assumed significance for international relations in the 21st century, since the publication of the previous edition. International Law is suited as core material for undergraduate courses in international law.
The work is also a useful first resource for legal practitioners who wish to engage with foundational and current principles of the field.
This fifth edition of International Law: A South African Perspective is now titled Dugard’s International Law: A South African Perspective, in recognition of the fact that this work is a continuation of the earlier editions written by John Dugard.
The substance of the work has undergone major changes to take account of new developments both on the international legal scene and in South Africa. Dugard’s International Law: A South African Perspective presents a South African perspective of international law. The basic principles of international law are described and examined with reference to the principal sources of international law. This examination, however, takes place within the context of South African law.
South African state practice, judicial decisions and legislation on international law receive equal treatment with international law as it is practised and taught abroad.
This book helps lawyers, practitioners, legislators and students
understand and cope with the challenges of e-commerce, and to learn
about the most up-to-date technology and regulation of Online
Dispute Resolution (ODR). It introduces different forms of online
dispute resolution, against the background of Alternative Dispute
Resolution (ADR) developments in the off-line environment;
crucially, it examines the current technology and legal status of
ODR in the EU, US, Asia and Australia, and discusses the relations
between the various parties in dispute resolutions, especially the
Fifth party for the provider of the technology. It further analyses
the four most successful examples, such as Michigan Cybercourt,
WIPO-UDRP, eBay-SquareTrade and AAA-CyberSettle. Finally, a
proposal for resolving e-contract disputes via ODR is provided, and
a code of conduct recommended in order to regulate the electronic
commerce market.
Based on exclusive research and up-to-date best practices within
the online dispute resolution fieldSimple and clear with an
in-depth analysis and of a wide range of topics such as technology,
management and lawProvides practical solutions to real-world
problems with a proposal of core principles and codes of conduct,
which is of great value in academia and legislative organizations
such as the European Commission and UNCITRAL
The material compiled in this volume brings together an edition of
intergovernmental documents that survey the rationale for
South-South cooperation, its scope, modalities, and strategic role
and support mechanisms with the means of implementation as
articulated in various outcome documents issued by the Group of 77
since its establishment in 1964.
This volume, which is intended to bring the Group's activities to
a wider audience, is divided into the following chapters:
Chapter I provides an overview of the major documents related to
the genesis of the Group of 77. Chapter II contains the final
agreements and outcomes of major meetings of the Group of 77 on
Economic Cooperation among Developing Countries (ECDC). Chapter III
presents the final documents of the sessions of the
Intergovernmental Follow up and Coordination Committee on Economic
Cooperation among Developing Countries (IFCC) held within the
framework of the Caracas Programme of Action on Economic
Cooperation among Developing Countries. Chapter IV consists of
final reports of the G-77 Sectoral Review Meetings in various
fields of cooperation. Chapters V and VI focus on two major
mechanisms of South-South cooperation, namely the Global System of
Trade Preferences among Developing Countries (GSTP) and the
Perez-Guerrero Trust Fund on Economic and Technical Cooperation
among Developing Countries (PGTF). Finally, chapter VII draws
excerpts on South-South cooperation from the outcome documents of
the G-77 South Summits, Ministerial Meetings, and Chapters'
Meetings, including the draft resolutions and decisions submitted
by the Group of 77 in the General Assembly of the United Nations.
Two annexes are included: Annex Ipertains to the chronology of
meetings of the Group of 77 on South-South cooperation covered in
this volume, while Annex II lists the Member States of the Group of
77 as of June 2007.
Today, international investment law consists of a network of
multifaceted, multilayered international treaties that, in one way
or another, involve virtually every country of the world. The
evolution of this network continues, raising a host of issues
regarding international investment law and policy, especially in
the area of international investment disputes. This Yearbook
monitors current developments in international investment law and
policy, focusing (in Part One) on trends in foreign direct
investment (FDI), international investment agreements, and
investment disputes, with a special look at developments in the oil
and gas sector. Part Two, then, looks at central issues in the
contemporary discussions on international investment law and
policy. With contributions by leading experts in the field, this
title provides timely, authoritative information on FDI that can be
used by a wide audience, including practitioners, academics,
researchers, and policy makers.
Co-published by Oxford University Press and the International Law
Institute, and prepared by the Office of the Legal Adviser at the
Department of State, the Digest of United States Practice in
International Law presents an annual compilation of documents and
commentary highlighting significant developments in public and
private international law, and is an invaluable resource for
practitioners and scholars in the field.
Each year's volume compiles excerpts from documents such as
treaties, diplomatic notes and correspondence, legal opinion
letters, judicial decisions, Senate committee reports and press
releases. Each document is selected by members of the Legal
Adviser's Office of the U.S. Department of State, based on their
judgments about the significance of the issues, their potential
relevance to future situations, and their likely interest to
scholars and practitioners. In almost every case, the commentary to
each excerpt is accompanied by a citation to the full text.
Featured in the 2008 Digest are excerpts from and discussion of
numerous documents relating to issues of current interest,
including the following:
* Department of Justice position on trial and conviction within the
U.S. of the son of former Liberian president Charles Taylor, for
torture (Chapter 3, "International Criminal Law").
* The U.S.-Libya Claims Settlement Agreement, including the Libyan
Claims Resolution Act (enacted August 4, 2008) (Chapter 8,
"International Claims and State Responsibility").
* Recognition of Kosovo as a sovereign state and establishment of
diplomatic relations with Kosovo (Chapter 9, "Diplomatic Relations,
Succession, and Continuity of States").
* Decisions in arbitration regarding the softwood lumber dispute
with Canada (Chapter 11, "Trade, Commercial Relations, Investment,
and Transportation").
* Statements and speeches of U.S. officials on climate change made
at international climate change conferences (Chapter 13,
"Environment and Other Transnational Scientific Issues").
* Executive Orders imposing sanctions on Burma, Syria, and Zimbabwe
(Chapter 16, "Sanctions").
* U.S. positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as well as
peace efforts in Lebanon, Somalia, and Sudan (Chapter 17,
"International Conflict Resolution and Avoidance").
* U.S. statements on the Russia-Georgia conflict and other
instances of international armed conflict (Chapter 18, "Use of
Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and Nonproliferation").
* U.S. positions on discussions of a possible Protocol to the
Convention on Conventional Weapons relating to cluster munitions,
and U.S. opposition to a separate Convention on Cluster Munitions
(Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
* U.S. federal court decisions on current and former Guantanamo
detainees (Boumediene v. Bush, Parhat v. Gates, Gates v. Bismullah,
Rasul v. Myers, and In re Guantanamo Bay Detainee Litigation
(pertaining to enemy combatant status of Uighur detainees)),
military commissions (United States v.Hamdan), detainees held in
the United States (Al-Marri v. Pucciarelli), and detainees held by
the Multinational Force in Iraq (Munaf v. Geren) (Chapter 18, "Use
of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
* UN Security Council Resolution and U.S. position on piracy in
Somalia (Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament,
and Nonproliferation").
* U.S. positions on nuclear nonproliferation-related issues,
including issues relating to North Korea, Iran, Syria, Russia, and
India (Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
This 24th volume of Annotated Leading Cases of International
Criminal Tribunals contains decisions taken by the International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in 2005-2006. It includes the full
text of the most important decisions, identical to the original
version, and includes concurring, separate, and dissenting
opinions. In the book, distinguished experts in the field of
international criminal law have commented on the decisions.
(Series: Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal
Tribunals - Vol. 24)
This collection of previously published essays by one of the
world's most distinguished experts in international law provides a
detailed analysis of some of the most complex issues to have
occupied international lawyers over the last quarter century.
Drawing on a lifetime's experience and knowledge, Mann provides
uncompromising and sometimes controversial essays on a host of
topics, including the doctrine of Jus Cogens in international law,
Britain's Bill of Rights, international wrong, state corporations
in international relations, the Barcelona Traction case, investment
treaties, the Aminoil arbitration, uniform statutes, the State
Immunity Act of 1978, inviolability, public rights, compound
interest as an item of damage, and the judicial recognition of
unrecognized states.
When International Law Works stands to change the way states and
scholars look at this contentious topic. In this seminal work,
Professor Tai-Heng Cheng addresses the current international law
debates and transcends them. Responding to influential statements
on international law by such scholars as Goldsmith, Posner,
O'Connell, and Guzman, Cheng presents a new framework that
decisionmakers should consider when they confront an international
problem that implicates the often competing policies and interests
of their own communities and global order. Instead of advocating
for or against international law as legitimate or binding, as many
commentators do, Cheng adknowledges both its shortcomings while
presenting a practical means of deciding whether compliance in a
given circumstance is beneficial, moral, or necessary. In this
manner Cheng shows how it is possible for decisionmakers to take
international law and its limitations seriously without actually
needing to determine whether or not international law is "law." To
demonstrate how his new proposal for approaching international law
would work in a real crisis, Cheng provides numerous case studies
from contemporary history that test his theory. Ranging topically
from the current global economic crisis to the West's war on
Islamist terrorism, these detailed and demonstrative case studies
set this book apart from similar works of international legal
scholarship. By combining theory with practice, When International
Law Works gives lawyers, judges, policymakers, academics and
students 'real world' guidance on how to face new global problems.
In doing so, this new book challenges readers to rethink the role
of law in an increasingly crisis-driven world.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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