International Law StudiesMartinus Nijhoff Publishers, 26.2.1997 - 394 sivua Reader beware. You are about to be challenged and drawn into a realm of unorthodox ideas, often stated provocatively ...' (From the Foreword). The field of international law is blessed with a broad range of high quality scholarship. But a truly fresh approach and real, original ideas always provide a welcome addition. Any serious player in the international law world will seek out these rare challenges to classic scholarship. "International Law Studies" is one of these unique works. In this second volume of collected papers, the author addresses: - environmental law, - human rights, - international criminal law, - foreign relations law, - the intersection of political science and international law, and - the study and practice of international law. The insightful and probing nature of the author's wholly new analysis of these critical topics will intrigue any international law scholar or practitioner. To miss "International Law Studies" is to shut out one of the most thought-provoking voices in the field. This is the second volume in a series of collected papers. |
Sisältö
A Foundation for Bioethics | 3 |
The Politics of Ecocide | 15 |
World Conferences and the Cheapening of International Norms | 32 |
Who Protects the Oceans? | 46 |
An Alternative to the Law of the Sea Convention | 61 |
Their Emerging Right to Life | 66 |
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS | 115 |
Are Human Rights Good for International Business? | 117 |
Universal in Rem Jurisdiction for Human Rights Cases? | 205 |
May the President Violate International Law? | 218 |
The United States and the Compulsory Jurisdiction of the World Court | 221 |
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL | 249 |
International Law from a Machiavellian Perspective | 251 |
The Relevance of Machiavelli to Contemporary World Politics | 267 |
Psychological Constructs in Foreign Policy Prediction | 279 |
International Law As Psychological Data | 300 |
Human Rights and Foreign Policy | 127 |
The Helsinki Accord | 136 |
Strong Opinions on Human Rights | 139 |
The Expatriation Tax and International Human Rights | 166 |
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL | 179 |
International Criminal Law and the MacroMicro Problem | 181 |
Torture as Raison DÉtat | 187 |
FOREIGN RELATIONS AND INTERNATIONAL | 195 |
The Alien Tort Statute | 197 |
Phenomenology of International Law | 311 |
Theory International Politics and International Law | 318 |
The Path of International Law | 339 |
International Law in the Curriculum | 355 |
Public International Law as a Career | 364 |
Dissemination of State Papers | 374 |
Old Approaches to International Law | 381 |
387 | |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
acceptance AJIL Alien Tort Statute American Anthony D'Amato argue argument Article behavior Birnie capital gains cause of action Chapter China CITES citizens claims commercial whaling concept conservation constitutional constructs Convention countries criminal customary international law customary law decision decision-makers Declaration disputes domestic law economic ecosystem effect enforcement entitlement environment environmental example Expatriation Tax fact force freedom future Gilbert supra note H.L.A. Hart Hans Kelsen Helsinki Accords human rights important individual interest international legal Inuit issue Japan Judge Bork's law of nations law school lawyers legal system Louis Henkin Machiavelli military moral moratorium Nicaragua norms nuclear ocean officials Patricia Patricia W person plaintiffs political pollution position problem Professor question reason result rules of international S-type Soviet Union species supra note 40 sustainable development Taiwan Strait theory threat tion tional law torture treaty United Nations violation World Court writing