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This is the first book that explores whether there are any rules in
international law applicable to unilateral sanctions and if so,
what they are. The book examines both the lawfulness of unilateral
sanctions and the limitations within which they should operate. In
doing so, it includes an analysis of State practice, the provisions
of various international legal instruments dealing with such
sanctions and their impact on other areas of international law such
as freedom of navigation, aviation and transit, and the principles
of international trade, investment, regional economic integration,
and the protection of human rights and the environment. This study
finds that unilateral sanctions by a state or a group of states
against another state as opposed to 'smart' or targeted sanctions
of limited scope would be unlawful, unless they meet the procedural
and substantive requirements stipulated in international law.
Importantly, the book identifies and consolidates these
requirements scattered in different areas of international law,
including the additional rules of customary international law that
have emerged out of the recent practice of States and that increase
the limitations on the use of unilateral sanctions.
This is the first book that explores whether there are any rules in
international law applicable to unilateral sanctions and if so,
what they are. The book examines both the lawfulness of unilateral
sanctions and the limitations within which they should operate. In
doing so, it includes an analysis of State practice, the provisions
of various international legal instruments dealing with such
sanctions and their impact on other areas of international law such
as freedom of navigation, aviation and transit, and the principles
of international trade, investment, regional economic integration,
and the protection of human rights and the environment. This study
finds that unilateral sanctions by a state or a group of states
against another state as opposed to 'smart' or targeted sanctions
of limited scope would be unlawful, unless they meet the procedural
and substantive requirements stipulated in international law.
Importantly, the book identifies and consolidates these
requirements scattered in different areas of international law,
including the additional rules of customary international law that
have emerged out of the recent practice of States and that increase
the limitations on the use of unilateral sanctions.
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