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This is the first volume to comprehensively and systematically
study, describe, and theorize the financial obligation created and
governed by public international law. Legal globalization has given
rise to a number of financial issues in international law in areas
as diverse as development financing, investment protection,
compensation of human rights victims, and sovereign debt crises.
The claims resulting from the proliferation of financial activity
are not limited to those primarily involving financial obligation
(e.g. loans and grants) but include secondary obligation resulting
from the law on international responsibility. Among the many
instances of financial obligation covered in this study, the reader
will find inter-State financial transactions, inter-State sale of
goods, transnational services such as telecommunications and post,
the financial operations of multilateral institutions, loans,
grants and guarantees provided by the various international
financial institutions, certain financial relations between
non-State actors (including natural persons) and States,
intergovernmental organizations or other international legal
actors, and government loans to international organizations. Rich
in historical detail and systematic in its coverage of contemporary
law, this book will be valued by all practitioners and scholars
with an interest in the nature of international financial
obligation.
Since the publication of the extremely well regarded first edition
of this title, the legal regime which forms the basis for INTERPOL
has changed significantly due to increasing criticism and calls for
reform. This timely new edition provides a complete update to
reflect the significant developments within the Organization since
2010. This new edition also examines INTERPOL's internal and
external law and situates INTERPOL's assistance to its members in
the legal regime of responsibility. It is the first text to
undertake this task. It draws on the jurisprudence of the
Commission for the Control of INTERPOL's Files and the authors'
extensive experience before this body to discuss in great detail
how an individual can challenge INTERPOL's interventions (including
the issuance of notices) on the basis of the Organization's
internal rules. It also meticulously describes the procedures under
which INTERPOL members might challenge INTERPOL's interventions and
how an individual can hold INTERPOL responsible for breaches of its
external law. Retaining the clarity of expression and expert
analysis that were hallmarks of the first edition, this book is
required reading for practitioners and academics alike. It provides
academics with a valuable case study on the creation of an
international organisation and the responsibility of international
organisations, and it offers practitioners a forensic analysis of
how to challenge INTERPOL and its actions.
Since the publication of the extremely well regarded first edition
of this title, the legal regime which forms the basis for INTERPOL
has changed significantly due to increasing criticism and calls for
reform. This timely new edition provides a complete update to
reflect the significant developments within the Organization since
2010. This new edition also examines INTERPOL’s internal and
external law and situates INTERPOL’s assistance to its members in
the legal regime of responsibility. It is the first text to
undertake this task. It draws on the jurisprudence of the
Commission for the Control of INTERPOL’s Files and the authors’
extensive experience before this body to discuss in great detail
how an individual can challenge INTERPOL’s interventions
(including the issuance of notices) on the basis of the
Organization’s internal rules. It also meticulously describes the
procedures under which INTERPOL members might challenge
INTERPOL’s interventions and how an individual can hold INTERPOL
responsible for breaches of its external law. Retaining the clarity
of expression and expert analysis that were hallmarks of the first
edition, this book is required reading for practitioners and
academics alike. It provides academics with a valuable case study
on the creation of an international organisation and the
responsibility of international organisations, and it offers
practitioners a forensic analysis of how to challenge INTERPOL and
its actions.
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