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P. Malanczuk / П. Маланчук - Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law/Вводный Курс Международного Права Акенхерста [2002, PDF, ENG] http://5.45.70.241/viewtopic.php?f=253&t=58012 |
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Заголовок сообщения: | P. Malanczuk / П. Маланчук - Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law/Вводный Курс Международного Права Акенхерста [2002, PDF, ENG] |
Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law/Вводный Курс Международного Права Акенхерста #777 Год: 2002 Автор: P. Malanczuk / П. Маланчук Жанр: учебник, юриспруденция Издательство: Taylor & Francis e-Library ISBN: 0-203-42771-8 Язык: Английский Формат: PDF Качество: Изначально компьютерное (eBook) Количество страниц: 472 Описание: Неплохой учебник по международному публичному праву (7ое издание) First published in 1970, A Modern Introduction to International Law rapidly established itself as the most widely used and successful textbook in its field. It covers a variety of topics from diplomatic immunity to human rights and from recognition of governments to war crimes. This new edition is now completely revised and updated to take account of many new developments and includes additional chapters on human rights, state responsibility, the environment and the economy. Preface xiii Abbreviations xvii 1 Introduction 1 The problem of defining international law 1 General and regional international law 2 Characteristics of international law 3 International law as ‘law’ 5 The scope of international law 7 2 History and theory 9 The formation of European international law 10 Features of European international law in state practice after 1648 11 Colonization and the relation to non-European powers 12 The Western hemisphere 14 Theory: naturalists and positivists 15 The theory of sovereignty 17 Legal results of the period up to the First World War 18 The unlimited right to use force 19 The peaceful settlement of disputes 20 Prohibition of the slave trade 21 Humanization of the law of warfare 21 First forms of international organizations 22 The Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 22 The watershed after the First World War 23 The League of Nations 23 The attempt to restrict the use of force 24 Other functions of the League 24 The Permanent Court of Justice 24 Failure of the League system 25 Development after the Second World War 26 The prohibition of the use of force and collective security in the United Nations Charter 26 Decolonization and change in the composition of the international community 28 Attitudes of Third World states towards international law 28 Universality and the challenge to the unity of international law 30 New developments in theory 32 3 Sources of international law 35 Treaties 36 Law-making treaties and ‘contract treaties’ 37 Parties to international treaties and ‘internationalized contracts’ 38 Custom 39 Where to look for evidence of customary law 39 The problem of repetition 41 What states say and what states do 43 The psychological element in the formation of customary law (opinio iuris) 44 ‘Instant’ customary law 45 Universality and the consensual theory of international law 46 General principles of law 48 Judicial decisions 51 Learned writers 51 Other possible sources of international law 52 Acts of international organizations 52 ‘Soft’ law 54 Equity 55 The hierarchy of the sources 56 Ius cogens 57 Obligations erga omnes and ‘international crimes’ 58 Codification of international law 60 4 International law and municipal law 63 Dualist and monist theories 63 The attitude of international law to municipal law 64 The attitude of national legal systems to international law 65 Treaties 65 Custom and general principles 68 Conclusions 71 Public international law and private international law 71 5 States and governments 75 States 75 Defined territory 75 Population 76 Effective control by a government 77 Capacity to enter into relations with other states 79 Self-determination and recognition as additional criteria 80 Federal states 81 Governments 81 Recognition of states and governments in international law 82 Recognition of states 82 Legal effects of recognition in international law 83 Legal effects in domestic law 86 Recognition of governments 86 De jure and de facto recognition 88 6 International organizations, individuals, companies and groups 91 International organizations 92 Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) 96 Individuals and companies 100 Insurgents and national liberation movements 104 Ethnic minorities and indigenous peoples 105 Minorities 105 Indigenous peoples 106 7 Jurisdiction 109 Forms of jurisdiction 109 Criminal jurisdiction of national courts 110 Territorial principle 110 Nationality principle 111 Protective principle 111 Universality principle 112 Universal jurisdiction of national courts over crimes against human rights 113 ‘Ivan the Terrible’ —The trial of John Demjanuk 115 Conflicts of jurisdiction 116 Extradition 117 8 Immunity from jurisdiction 118 Sovereign (or state) immunity 118 The act of state doctrine 121 Diplomatic immunity 123 Immunity from the jurisdiction of courts 125 Other privileges and immunities 126 Consular immunity 127 Immunities of international organizations 127 Waiver of immunity 128 9 Treaties 130 Conclusion and entry into force of treaties 131 Adoption of the text of a treaty 131 Consent to be bound by a treaty 131 Entry into force 134 Reservations 135 Registration 136 Application of treaties 137 Territorial scope of treaties 137 Treaties and third states 137 Application of successive treaties relating to the same subject matter 137 Invalid treaties 137 Provisions of municipal law regarding competence to conclude treaties 138 Treaties entered into by persons not authorized to represent a state 138 Specific restrictions on authority to express the consent of a state 139 Coercion of a representative of a state 139 Coercion of a state by the threat or use of force 139 Other causes of invalidity 140 The consequences of invalidity 140 Termination of treaties 141 Termination in accordance with the provisions of a treaty 141 Termination by consent of the parties 141 Implied right of denunciation or withdrawal 142 Termination or suspension of a treaty as a consequence of its breach (discharge through breach) 142 Supervening impossibility of performance 144 Fundamental change of circumstances (rebus sic stantibus) 144 Emergence of a new peremptory norm (ius cogens) 145 Outbreak of war 145 Consequences of termination or suspension 146 10 Acquisition of territory 147 Modes of acquisition of territory 147 Cession 148 Occupation 148 Prescription 150 Operations of nature 151 Adjudication 151 Conquest 151 Acquiescence, recognition and estoppel 154 Intertemporal law 155 Legal and political arguments 157 Minor rights over territory 158 Servitudes 158 11 Legal consequences of changes of sovereignty over territory (state succession) 161 Treaties 162 Treaties dealing with rights over territory 162 Other types of treaties 163 The principle of ‘moving treaty boundaries’ 163 Decolonization and new states 164 Recent practice 165 Secession 165 Baltic states 165 Dismemberment 166 Soviet Union 166 Yugoslavia 167 Czechoslovakia 167 Unification 167 Germany 167 Yemen 168 International claims 169 Nationality 169 Public property 169 Private property 170 Contractual rights 170 12 The law of the sea 173 Internal waters 175 Territorial sea 176 The right of innocent passage 176 Rights of the coastal state over the territorial sea 177 The width of the territorial sea 178 The line from which the territorial sea is measured 180 The contiguous zone 182 Exclusive fishery zones and exclusive economic zones 183 The high seas 184 Interference with ships on the high seas 186 Jurisdiction of municipal courts over crimes committed on the high seas 190 The continental shelf 191 The deep seabed 193 Maritime boundaries 195 13 Air space and outer space 198 Air space 198 Outer space 201 The ‘common heritage of mankind’ principle 207 14 Human rights 209 The concept of human rights 209 Human rights on the universal level 211 The United Nations Charter 211 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 212 United Nations bodies active in the field of human rights 213 The 1966 Covenants 215 Other human rights instruments on the universal level 216 Human rights on the regional level 217 The European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 217 Other regional instruments 219 Human rights as a matter of international concern 220 15 Economy 222 The Bretton Woods system and international economic organizations 223 The International Monetary Fund (IMF) 225 The World Bank 227 The GATT 228 The new World Trade Organization 231 The trade agreements on goods 231 The Agreement on Services (GATS) 232 The Agreement on Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) 232 Institutional aspects 233 Developing countries and the legal quest for a New International Economic Order 233 Expropriation and standard of compensation 235 Disguised expropriation 238 Expropriation of contractual rights 238 The right to development 239 16 Environment 241 The scope and nature of international environmental law 242 Customary law and general principles 245 The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development 247 The Convention on Climate Change 248 The Biodiversity Convention 249 The Rio Declaration and Agenda 21 250 Conclusions 251 17 State responsibility 254 The work of the International Law Commission 254 State responsibility and the treatment of aliens 256 ‘Imputability’ 257 The minimum international standard 260 Preliminary objections 262 Nationality of claims 263 Exhaustion of local remedies 267 Waiver 268 Unreasonable delay and improper behaviour by the injured alien 269 Consequences of an internationally wrongful act 269 Countermeasures and dispute settlement 271 18 Peaceful settlement of disputes between states 273 Diplomatic methods of dispute settlement 275 Negotiations 275 Good offices and mediation 275 Fact-finding and inquiry 277 Conciliation 278 Legal methods of dispute settlement 281 Adjudication 281 The International Court of Justice 281 Composition 282 Jurisdiction in contentious cases 282 Procedure 287 Ad hoc chambers 288 Enforcement of judgments 288 Advisory opinions 289 Evaluation of the Court 290 Arbitration 293 ICSID 295 The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal 296 Settlement of disputes under the Law of the Sea Convention 298 Conclusions 300 19 International wars, civil wars and the right to self-determination: ius ad bellum 306 Lawful and unlawful wars: developments before 1945 306 The prohibition of the use of force in the United Nations Charter 309 Self-defence 311 Preventive self-defence 311 Self-defence and claims to territory 314 Self-defence against attacks on ships and aircraft 315 Armed protection of nationals abroad 315 Armed reprisals 316 Immediacy and proportionality 316 Collective self-defence 317 Civil wars 318 The legality of civil wars 318 Participation by other states: help for the insurgents 319 Participation by other states: help for the established authorities 322 The theory that help for the established authorities is legal 322 The theory that help for the established authorities is illegal 323 Collective self-defence against subversion 324 Conclusion 325 Self-determination and the use of force 326 Mandated territories, trust territories and non-self-governing territories 327 Mandated territories 327 Trust territories 328 South West Africa (Namibia) 328 Non-self-governing territories 329 Double standards? 332 Consequences of violations of the right of self-determination 334 Creation of new states 334 Title to territory 334 Wars of national liberation 336 New developments 338 The effectiveness of the modern rules against the use of force 341 20 Means of waging war and criminal responsibility: ius in bello 342 Lawful and unlawful means of waging war 342 Nuclear weapons 346 The law of neutrality and economic uses of maritime warfare 350 Reprisals 351 Rules governing the conduct of civil wars 352 War crimes trials 353 The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia 355 Jurisdiction of the Tribunal 356 The work of the Tribunal 358 The Rwanda Tribunal 360 Towards a permanent international criminal court? 360 Possible future developments 361 21 The Charter and the organs of the United Nations 364 The United Nations Charter and the problem of interpretation 364 Literal interpretation 365 Intention and travaux prйparatoires 366 Practice 366 Effectiveness and implied powers 367 The purposes of the United Nations 368 Domestic jurisdiction 368 Membership 369 The representation of China 371 The case of Yugoslavia 372 The organs of the United Nations 373 The Security Council 373 The General Assembly 377 The Secretariat 380 The Economic and Social Council and the specialized agencies 382 22 The United Nations and peace and security 385 Pacific settlement of disputes under the United Nations Charter (Chapter VI) 385 Collective security and enforcement action (Chapter VII) 387 Practice under Chapter VII during the Cold War 390 The United Nations force in Korea 391 The Uniting for Peace Resolution 392 Rhodesia and South Africa 393 Practice under Chapter VII after the end of the Cold War 395 The invasion of Kuwait by Iraq 396 The Kurdish crisis 399 Somalia 402 Rwanda 405 Haiti 407 Yugoslavia 409 UN peacekeeping 416 The ‘old’ peacekeeping during the Cold War 416 The first United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East (UNEF) 417 The United Nations Force in the Congo (ONUC) 418 The Expenses case 420 The United Nations Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) 420 New forces in the Middle East 422 New forms of peacekeeping after the Cold War 423 Conclusion 425 Table of cases 431 Table of treaties, declarations and other documents 435 Index 441 |
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