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This text contains articles on issues such as: transnational
terrorism; limitations on the power of the UN Security Council to
exercise its enforcement powers under Chapter VII of the Charter;
on the uniting of States in respect of treaties; and the weighing
of evidence in a dual national case at the Iran-United States
Claims Tribunal. The documentation section surveys Dutch state
practice for the parliamentary year 1994-1995; international
agreements to which the Netherlands is a party; Netherlands
judicial decisions and municipal legislation involving questions of
public international law, and Dutch literature in the field of
public international law and related matters. This Yearbook is
included in the 1995 subscription to the Netherlands International
Law Review (Volume 42).
Two major factors brought about the establishment of the
Netherlands Yearbook of International Law in 1970: demand for the
publication of national practice in international law, and the
desirability for legal practitioners, state representatives and
international lawyers to have access to the growing amount of
available data, in the form of articles, notes etc. The
Documentation section contains an extensive review of Dutch state
practice from the parliamentary year prior to publication, an
account of developments relating to treaties and other
international agreements to which the Netherlands is a party,
summaries of Netherlands judicial decisions involving questions of
public international law (many not published elsewhere), lists of
Dutch publications in the field and extracts from relevant
municipal legislation. Although the NYIL has a distinctive national
character it is published in English, and the editors do not adhere
to any geographical limitations when deciding upon the inclusion of
articles.
The 1998 Netherlands Yearbook of International Law contains expert
articles on issues such as new challenges to IMF jurisdiction, and
a perspective on provisional measures under UNCLOS. The
documentation section surveys: Dutch state practice for the
parliamentary year 1996-1997; international agreements to which the
Netherlands is a party; Netherlands judicial decisions and
municipal legislation involving questions of public international
law; and Dutch literature in the field of public international law
and related matters. The Yearbook is included in the 1998
subscription to the Netherlands International Law Review (Volume
45).
By describing and analysing the process which precedes
decision-making in the Council of Ministers, an insider's view is
presented in this book of the process of decision-making in the
European Union. The main subject is the Permanent Representatives
Committee, comprising Ambassadors of the Member States to the
European Union, the Permanent Representatives. Coreper has the
general responsibility for preparing the work of the Council.
The book is based on a legal thesis, which was published in
Dutch at the end of 1993. For the English version the text has been
revised and, where necessary, updated. The content, which is
largely derived from practical experience, should provide a clearer
picture of the current state of affairs of European integration in
general, and the functioning of the European institutions in
particular. To this extent the book serves the political objective
of creating transparency in the decision-making of the European
Union.
Audience:
All those working in the public services, international
organizations, universities, liberal professions and economic life
whose everyday work brings them into contact with aspects of the
European Union and its institutions.
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