Showing 781 - 800 results of 4,712 for search '"International Law"', query time: 0.14s Refine Results
  1. 781
  2. 782
  3. 783

    The integration paradox: an ILC view on the EU contribution to the codification and development of rules of general international law by Teresa Cabrita

    Published 2021-09-01
    “…<p class="first" id="d1244197e91">The contribution of international organisations (IOs) to the process of identification, codification or development of rules of general international law is one still enveloped in a measure of mystery. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 784
  5. 785

    Between Sovereignty and Race: The Bombardment of Hospitals in the Italo-Ethiopian War and the Colonial Imprint of International Law by Nicola Perugini, Neve Gordon

    Published 2019-01-01
    “…Relying on archival materials, we show how the fascist regime presented these attacks as legitimate reprisal; it was, the Italians claimed, the Ethiopian forces who had violated international law, particularly the principle of distinction, when they used medical facilities to hide. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 786
  7. 787

    Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar) by Muhammad Naguib Abdul Malik

    Published 2016-12-01
    “…Keywords: Islamic International Law (Siyar), International Court of Justice (ICJ), Judge Made Law, Maritime Boundary Delimitations, Unpredictable Results, The Principle of Joint Administration, The Principle of Joint Development. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 788
  9. 789

    The Infrastructure of International Law-Making: How Buildings Shape the Publicness of the Global Law-Making System by Nahuel Maisley

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…International law is a peculiar form of global ordering, one marked by the “imperative of trying to turn a capacity for crude coercion into legitimate authority.”1 The international law-making system is therefore discursively structured around an aspiration to “publicness,”2 around a commitment to secure “some responsiveness to the claims and interests developed within the relevant publics.”3 As it is evident to any observer, this commitment is oftentimes not honored and the process is frequently detached from the ideas, interests, and priorities of those whose lives are ultimately governed by international law.4 The typical analysis of this detachment tends to focus on the role played by the enabling norms—specifically, the norms governing representation, participation, and deliberation in the international law-making system.5 In this Essay, I argue, however, that the actual publicness of the system is also shaped—sometimes in combination with the law, sometimes in competition with it—by the infrastructure of international law-making.6 For all the grand statements about transparency and public engagement, for all the sincere attempts at inclusion and all the ostentatious legal principles, my claim is that the built environment—the chambers, the fences, the checkpoints, the hallways—generally ensures, both materially and symbolically, that the sites of decision making, where law is ultimately created, are distanced from multiple sites of contestation, where the various publics and counterpublics make their voices heard.7…”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 790
  11. 791

    Simon Marsden, Protecting the Third Pole: Transplanting international law (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2019) by Romain Chuffart

    Published 2020-03-01
    “…A review of the book: Simon Marsden, Protecting the Third Pole: Transplanting international law (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2019)…”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 792

    The European Union’s Participation in the Creation of Customary International Law and Its Impact on Member State Sovereignty by Christina Binder, Philipp Janig

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…The participation of international organizations in the formation of customary international law. – III.1. Overview. – III.2. Whose practice? …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 793
  14. 794
  15. 795
  16. 796

    Limits on Exoneration from Responsibility in International Law: Amnesties, Selection and Priorization of Cases in National Jurisdiction by Sebastián Machado Ramírez

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…The objective of this article is to study three regulatory frameworks in international law: 1) international human rights law; 2) international humanitarian law; and 3) international criminal law. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 797
  18. 798

    Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar) by Muhammad Naguib Abdul Malik

    Published 2016-12-01
    “…Keywords: Islamic International Law (Siyar), International Court of Justice (ICJ), Judge Made Law, Maritime Boundary Delimitations, Unpredictable Results, The Principle of Joint Administration, The Principle of Joint Development. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 799
  20. 800

    The Evolution of the Concept of Underwater Cultural Heritage in Europe: A Review of International Law, Policy, and Practice by Alessio Calantropio, Filiberto Chiabrando

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…Several factors, including technological advances, the development of international law, and the growing awareness of the importance of cultural heritage, have influenced the evolution of the concept of UCH. …”
    Get full text
    Article