1. | Addis, Adeno : Imagining the international community, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Imagining the international community : the constitutive dimension of universal jurisdiction / Addis, Adeno REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : a comparative and international journal of the social sciences, humanities and law : vol. 31; no. 1., p. 129-162. - Baltimore, MA : John Hopkins U. P., 2009. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/v031/31.1.addis.html |
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2. | Proceedings of the 107th annual meeting, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Proceedings of the 107th annual meeting : international law in a multipolar world /, xiii, 560 p.. - Washington, DC : ASIL, 2014. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. An introduction: International law in a multipolar world. 2. Fifteenth annual Grotius lecture. 3. Opening plenary and remarks by ASIL president. 4. Alternatives to investor-state arbitration in a multipolar world. 5. Uncommon remedies in international dispute settlement. 6. Raid on Bin Laden and the consequences for sovereignty and the UN Charter. 7. Stepping out of the politics: Legal solutions to maritime disputes in Asia. 8. The future of human rights fact-finding. 9. Divergent responses to climate change in a multipolar world. 10. Transitional justice branches out: Transitional justice and peacebuilding. 11. Challenges and approaches to effective cyberspace governance in a multipolar world. 12. Women in international law interest group luncheon. 13. How is the law of the sea coping with new ocean resources?. 14. Unquenchable thirst: The outlook for energy disputes in Africa. 15. The Inter-American human rights system in crisis. 16. Retrospective on international law in the first Obama administration. 17. Kiobel, the ATS and human rights litigation in U.S. courts. 18. G20 and beyond: The influence of emerging countries on the architecture of international economic law. 19. The EU as a global actor in a multipolar world. 20. The past and future of African international law scholarship. 21. The regulation of private military and security contractors. 22. Unilateral secession in a multipolar world. 23. China-Africa investment treaties and dispute settlement: A piece of the multipolar puzzle. 24. Domestic treatment of universal jurisdiction. 25. Anti-corruption initiatives in a multipolar world. 26. 21st century international institutions: Lessons from global health governance?. 27. Arctic law: The challenges of governance in the changing Arctic. 28. The challenges for ASEAN: The South China Sea, investment protection, and Myanmar. 29. Regulating the impacts of international project financing. 30. Evolution of economic sanctions: Where do we stand with financial sanctions?. 31. The changing role of regional organizations in African peace and security. 32. Rethinking private international law: The emergence of the 'private'. 33. China and international law. 34. Regional perspectives on refugee protection. 35. The complex history of international law. 36. Inaugural Charles N. Brower lecture on international dispute resolution. 37. Twenty years of international criminal law: From the ICTY to the ICC and beyond. 38. The tension between law and politics: Can the ICC navigate a multipolar world?. 39. Multipolar governance across environmental treaty regimes. 40. The proliferation of regional trade agreements: (Re)shaping the trade landscape with multilateralism on pause. 41. The 2012 UN Declaration on the Rule of Law and its projections. 42. New voices: Human rights. 43. Closing plenary: Global governance, state sovereignty, and the future of international law. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: China / Nigeria / United States NOTE (MEETINGS): Proceedings of the 107th annual meeting of the American Society of International Law, Washington, DC, April 3-6, 2013. LIBRARY LOCATION: s ASIL |
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3. | Vicente, Trinidad L. (coord. ed.) : Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights / Vicente, Trinidad L. (coord. ed.), 267 p. - Bilbao : Instituto de Derechos Humanos Pedro Arrupe, 2015. - ISSN 1885-298X LANGUAGE: SPA, ENG ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. Jordi Palou-Loverdos: Relaciones internacionales y justicia transicional: memoria, jurisdicción universal y el caso Ruanda/RD Congo. 2. Jorge Rodriguez Rodriguez: La transición española ante los sistemas universal y europeo de protección de los derechos humanos. 3. Sam Underwood: Investing in change: education, transitional justice and impact in the Colombian peacebuilding process. 4. Lucia E.M. Savini: Avoiding amnesty in the age of accountability: Colombia's proposal for alternative sentencing. 5. Cristina Sala Valdés: Concepciones y prácticas de la(s) comunicación(es) para la paz: actores y propuestas formales en perspective critica. 6. Nerea Azkona: La coherencia entre los marcos normativos de Naciones Unidas, la Unión Europea y el Estado español: el caso de las politicas de cooperación y la dimensión exteriro de la politica migratoria. 7. Manuela Gabriel: Participación y asociacionismo del colectivo de inmigrantes: instrumentos para el ejercicio de la ciudadania. 8. Saioa Bilabo Urkidi: Comunidades solidarias: confesiones religiosas minoritarias y su función integradora. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Colombia / Democratic Republic of the Congo / Rwanda / Spain LIBRARY LOCATION: S Yearbook on humanitarian action... |
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4. | Ratner, Steven R. : The thin justice of international law, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The thin justice of international law : a moral reckoning of the law of nations / Ratner, Steven R., 471 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017. ISBN 978-0-19-880715-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Legal and ethical approaches to global justice: the dialogue of the (near-)deaf. 2. Conceptual groundwork for a standard of global justice. 3. A standard of global justice. 4. Norms and territorial integrity and political independence: the ban on the use of force and non-intervention. 5. The claims of peoples: self-determination and state borders. 6. Norms of participation: sovereign equality of states. 7. Sovereign equality's limits: membership and decisionmaking rules in international organizations. 8. Human rights for whom?: territoriality, extraterritoriality, and universal jurisdiction. 9. Extraterritorial protection of human rights through force: from humanitarian intervention to the responsibility to protect. 10. Regulating global trade. 11. The international investment regime. 12. The limits of thin justice: international humanitarian, criminal, and environmental law. 14. Beyond thin justice. INDEX WORDS:
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5. | van der Wilt, Harmen (ed.) : Legal responses to transnational and international crimes, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Legal responses to transnational and international crimes : towards an integrative approach / van der Wilt, Harmen (ed.) ; Paulussen, Christophe (ed.), 322 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017. ISBN 978-1-78643-398-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Harmen van der Wilt: Legal responses to transnational and international crimes: towards a integrative approach?. 2. Neil Boister: Responding to transnational crime: the distinguishing features of transnational criminal law. 3. Héctor Olásolo: Is international criminal law an appropriate mechanism to deal with organised crime in a global society?. 4. Marta Bo: Piracy at the intersection between international and national: regional enforcement of a transnational crime. 5. Inez Braber: Terrorism as a new generation transnational crime: prosecuting terrorism at the International Criminal Court. 6. Alejandro Chehtman: Terrorism and the conceptual divide between international and transnational criminal law. 7. Ilias Bantekas: Cybercrime and its sovereign spaces: an international law perspective. 8. Nicolò Bussolati: Domestic and international legal approaches to the repression of politically motivated cyber-attacks. 9. Giulio Nessi: Transnational prosecution of grand corruption and its discontent. 10. Dirk van Leeuwen: Prosecuting money laundering at the ICC: can it stop the funding of international criminal organisations?. 11. Maria Laura Ferioli: Safeguarding defendants' rights in transnational and international cooperation. 12. Sabine Gless: Ne bis in idem in an international and transnational criminal justice perspective: paving the way for an individual right?. 13. Sander Wirken and Hanna Bosdriesz: Privatisation and increasing complexity of mass violence in Mexico and Central America: exploring appropriate international responses. 14. Charles Chernor Jalloh: The distinction between 'international' and 'transnational' crimes in the African Criminal Court. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Guatemala / Mexico |