Handbook of International Law

Höfundur Anthony Aust

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780521117050

Útgáfa 2

Höfundarréttur

9.290 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Coverpage
  • Halftitle page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Foreword to the First Edition
  • Preface to Second Edition
  • Acknowledgements
  • Table of treaties
  • Table of MOUs
  • Table of cases
  • Glossary of legal terms
  • List of abbreviations
  • 1 International law
  • Introduction
  • Private international law
  • Transnational law
  • The nature of international law
  • But is international law really law?
  • International lawyers
  • The sources of international law
  • Treaties
  • Customary international law
  • General principles of law recognised by ‘civilized’ nations
  • Good faith
  • Estoppel
  • Norms
  • Judicial decisions
  • Teachings of the most highly qualified publicists
  • General international law
  • Obligations erga omnes
  • Jus cogens
  • ‘Soft law’
  • Comity
  • Domestic law
  • Subjects and objects of, and actors in, international law
  • National liberation movements
  • NGOs
  • 2 States and recognition
  • Introduction
  • Criteria for statehood
  • Recognition of States
  • Vatican City
  • Taiwan
  • Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
  • Soviet Republics and former Soviet Republics
  • Yugoslavia
  • Domestic courts and unrecognised States
  • Self-determination
  • Secession
  • Territorial integrity and uti possidetis
  • Recognition of governments
  • Governments in exile
  • De jure and de facto recognition
  • Palestine
  • Western Sahara
  • Means of recognition
  • Overseas territories
  • British territories
  • Colonies
  • Protectorates
  • Protected States
  • Condominiums
  • Mandated and trust territories
  • 3 Territory
  • Introduction
  • Boundary, border or frontier?
  • Delimitation and demarcation
  • Intertemporal rule
  • Critical date
  • Means of acquisition
  • Discovery
  • Conquest and annexation
  • Cession
  • Occupation and prescription
  • Acquiescence, estoppel and recognition
  • Boundary treaties
  • Leases
  • Rivers
  • State servitudes
  • Res communis
  • Common heritage of mankind
  • Territorial integrity and uti possidetis
  • 4 Jurisdiction
  • Introduction
  • Territorial principle
  • Nationality principle
  • Passive personality principle
  • Protective principle
  • Universal and quasi-universal jurisdiction
  • Effects doctrine
  • Alien Tort Claims Act 1789
  • Abduction
  • 5 The law of treaties
  • Introduction
  • The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969
  • What is a treaty?
  • Concluded between States
  • In written form
  • Governed by international law
  • Embodied in a single instrument or in two or more related instruments
  • Given any name
  • Signed?
  • MOUs
  • But are MOUs really treaties?
  • Agreements between States governed by domestic law
  • Capacity to make treaties
  • Federations
  • Overseas territories
  • International organisations
  • Credentials and full powers
  • Credentials
  • Full powers
  • Adoption and authentication
  • Adoption
  • Consensus
  • Authentication
  • Final act
  • Consent to be bound
  • Signature only
  • ‘Open for signature’
  • Witnessing
  • Exchange of instruments
  • Ratification
  • Who can sign the instrument of ratification?
  • Acceptance or approval
  • Accession
  • Any other agreed means
  • ‘Signatory’, ‘party’ and ‘adherence’
  • The ‘all States’ and ‘Vienna’ formulas
  • Rights and obligations before entry into force
  • Obligation not to defeat the object and purpose of a treaty before its entry into force
  • Withdrawal of consent to be bound before entry into force
  • Development of treaties
  • Reservations
  • Bilateral treaties
  • Multilateral treaties
  • Interpretative declarations
  • Disguised reservations
  • Reservations generally not prohibited
  • Acceptance of, and objection to, reservations
  • ‘Plurilateral treaties’
  • Constituent instrument of an international organisation
  • All other cases
  • The legal effects of reservations and of objections to reservations
  • Unresolved issues
  • Reservations to human rights treaties
  • Treaty-monitoring bodies
  • Some ways of minimising the problem of reservations
  • Procedure
  • Late reservations
  • The International Law Commission study
  • Entry into force
  • Express provisions
  • Date of entry into force
  • Provisional application
  • Preparatory commissions
  • Treaties and domestic law
  • Duty to perform treaties
  • Constitutional provisions
  • Dualism
  • Monism
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
  • Implementation by states of a federation
  • Territorial application
  • Territorial extension clauses
  • Declaration on signature or ratification of a multilateral treaty
  • Political subdivisions of metropolitan territory
  • Successive treaties
  • Interpretation
  • Article 31 General rule of interpretation
  • Paragraph 1
  • Paragraph 2 (context)
  • Paragraph 3(a) (subsequent agreements)
  • Paragraph 3(b) (subsequent practice)
  • Paragraph 3(c) (relevant rules of international law)
  • Paragraph 4 (special meaning)
  • Supplementary means of interpretation
  • Implied terms
  • Interpretation of treaties in more than one language
  • Third States
  • Amendment
  • Bilateral treaties
  • Multilateral treaties
  • Duration and termination
  • Express provisions
  • Termination or withdrawal by consent
  • No provision for termination or withdrawal
  • Termination or suspension for breach
  • Supervening impossibility of performance
  • Fundamental change of circumstances (rebus sic stantibus)
  • Severance of diplomatic or consular relations
  • Outbreak of hostilities
  • Can one validly withdraw from a treaty and immediately become a party again?
  • Desuetude
  • Invalidity
  • ‘Unequal treaties’
  • The depositary
  • Designation of a depositary
  • Multiple depositaries
  • Duty to act impartially
  • Functions of the depositary
  • Correction of errors
  • Registration and publication
  • Registration
  • Publication
  • Sources of treaty texts
  • Treaty indexes
  • Further reading on treaties
  • 6 Diplomatic privileges and immunities
  • Introduction
  • The establishment of diplomatic relations and permanent diplomatic missions
  • The functions of a diplomatic mission
  • The members of the mission
  • Persona non grata
  • Size and composition of the mission staff
  • The premises of the mission
  • Facilitating the acquisition of premises for the mission
  • Help with facilities for the mission
  • Inviolability of the premises of the mission
  • Police action
  • Service of legal process
  • Immunity from jurisdiction
  • Bank account of the mission
  • Protection from intrusion or damage
  • Disturbance of the peace of the mission and impairment of its dignity
  • Asylum
  • When inviolability of mission premises begins and ends
  • Exemption of mission premises from taxation
  • Inviolability of mission archives
  • Means of transport
  • Freedom of movement
  • Freedom of communication
  • Inviolability of official correspondence
  • The diplomatic bag
  • What is a diplomatic bag?
  • What may the diplomatic bag contain?
  • Prohibition on opening or detaining the diplomatic bag
  • Scanning the diplomatic bag
  • Diplomatic couriers
  • Personal inviolability
  • No arrest or detention
  • Safeguarding from attack
  • Inviolability of the private residence
  • Inviolability of private papers, correspondence and property
  • The difference between diplomatic immunity and State immunity
  • Diplomatic immunity
  • Exception (a): private immovable property in the territory of the receiving State
  • Exception (b): private involvement in succession proceedings
  • Exception (c): private professional or commercial activity
  • Proof of diplomatic immunity
  • Immunity from giving evidence
  • What immunity is not
  • Immunity from execution
  • Waiver of immunity
  • Social security exemption
  • Exemption from taxation
  • Exemption from personal services
  • Exemption from customs duties and inspection
  • Members of the family of a diplomatic agent
  • Working spouses
  • Administrative and technical staff
  • Service staff
  • Private servants
  • Nationals and permanent residents of the receiving State
  • Commencement of privileges and immunities
  • Termination of privileges and immunities
  • Third States
  • Diplomats in transit
  • Communication in transit
  • Duties of the mission to the receiving State
  • End of the functions of a diplomatic agent
  • Facilities for depature
  • Breach of diplomatic relations and the protection of the interests of the sending State
  • Non-discrimination and reciprocity
  • Special missions
  • Consular relations
  • 7 State immunity
  • Introduction
  • The relationship of State immunity to other legal doctrines
  • Diplomatic immunity distinguished
  • Non-justiciability
  • Act of State
  • Human rights
  • Sources of the law on State immunity
  • Which entities enjoy immunity?
  • Exceptions to immunity
  • Consent
  • Commercial transactions
  • Contracts of employment
  • Torts (delicts)
  • Ownership, possession and use of property
  • Intellectual and industrial property rights
  • Ships
  • Aircraft and space objects
  • Registration of a foreign judgment
  • Criminal jurisdiction
  • Enforcement
  • Pre-judgment measures of constraint
  • Execution of the judgment
  • Procedure
  • Service of process
  • Judgment in default
  • Visiting forces
  • Civil claims
  • Criminal jurisdiction
  • Heads of State, heads of government, foreign ministers and other senior officials
  • Civil proceedings
  • Criminal proceedings
  • 8 Nationality, aliens and refugees
  • Nationality
  • Introduction
  • Dual nationality
  • Citizenship
  • The right to leave and return to one’s State of nationality
  • Passports
  • Statelessness
  • Legal persons
  • Ships and aircraft
  • Diplomatic protection
  • Aliens
  • Property of aliens
  • Asylum
  • Diplomatic asylum
  • Refugees
  • Definition of refugee
  • Application for refugee status
  • Fear of persecution
  • Exceptions to refugee status
  • Non-refoulement
  • Protection for the State of refuge
  • Obligations of the State of refuge to the refugee
  • 9 International organisations
  • Introduction
  • Membership and representation
  • Credentials
  • Withdrawal
  • International legal personality
  • Immunities and privileges
  • Liability
  • Dispute settlement
  • The United Nations
  • The (so-called) UN specialised agencies
  • Staff disputes
  • 10 The United Nations, including the use of force
  • Introduction
  • Membership
  • Withdrawal, suspension and expulsion
  • Regional groups
  • The UN’s principal organs
  • The UN’s specialised agencies
  • The General Assembly
  • Main Committees of the General Assembly
  • Sixth Committee
  • The Security Council
  • Membership
  • Working methods
  • Powers of the Security Council
  • Sanctions
  • Human rights
  • Uniting for peace
  • Charter amendment
  • Use of force
  • Prohibition on the use of force
  • Security Council authorisation for the use of force
  • Self-defence
  • Humanitarian intervention
  • A responsibility to protect?
  • 11 Human rights
  • Introduction
  • Who enjoys the rights?
  • What is a human right?
  • Universal human rights treaties
  • United Nations
  • ILO
  • Regional human rights treaties
  • European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950
  • American Convention on Human Rights 1969
  • African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights 1981
  • Arab Charter on Human Rights 1994
  • Outline of the principal civil and political rights
  • Right to life
  • Prohibition of torture
  • Prohibition of slavery and forced labour
  • Right to liberty and security
  • Right to a fair trial
  • No punishment without law
  • Respect for private and family life
  • Freedom of thought, conscience and religion
  • Freedom of expression
  • Freedom of assembly and association
  • Right to marry
  • Right to an effective remedy
  • Prohibition of discrimination
  • Freedom of movement
  • Right to free elections
  • Right to property
  • Right to education
  • General qualifications to rights
  • Reservations
  • Derogations
  • Enforcement
  • European Court of Human Rights
  • Other regional treaties
  • Human Rights Committee
  • Other UN monitoring bodies
  • 12 The law of armed conflict (international humanitarian law)
  • Introduction
  • Sources
  • International and internal armed conflicts
  • Weaponry
  • Conventional weapons
  • Nuclear, chemical and biological weapons (WMD)
  • Reprisals
  • Prisoners of war
  • Mercenaries
  • Civilians and civilian objects
  • Occupied territory
  • Palestine
  • Enforcement
  • UN forces
  • International Committee of the Red Cross
  • 13 International criminal law
  • Introduction
  • Mutual legal assistance
  • Extradition
  • Political offence/exception
  • Simplified extradition
  • Irregular means
  • International crimes
  • Piracy
  • Slavery
  • Genocide
  • Crimes against humanity
  • War crimes
  • Aggression
  • Responsibility of superiors
  • Superior orders
  • International tribunals
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
  • International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
  • Sierra Leone Special Court
  • Extraordinary Chambers of the Courts of Cambodia
  • Special Tribunal for Lebanon
  • International Criminal Court (ICC)
  • Jurisdiction
  • Surrender of accused persons
  • Personal responsibility
  • United States
  • Procedure
  • 14 Terrorism
  • Introduction
  • Definitions
  • ‘State terrorism’
  • ‘State-sponsored terrorism’
  • Universal terrorism conventions
  • No international definition of terrorism
  • The sectoral, segmental or incremental approach
  • The main provisions of the universal terrorism conventions
  • ‘International’ terrorism
  • Definition of the offences
  • Quasi-universal jurisdiction
  • ‘Refugees’ and terrorism
  • Security Council
  • Lockerbie
  • Bin Laden, Al-Qaida and the Taliban
  • 15 The law of the sea
  • Introduction
  • Internal waters
  • Right of access by foreign ships
  • Baselines
  • Territorial sea
  • Islands
  • Innocent passage
  • Rights of the coastal State over ships in innocent passage
  • Contiguous zone
  • Exclusive economic zone
  • Rights, jurisdiction and duties of the coastal State in the EEZ
  • Rights and duties of other States in the EEZ
  • International straits
  • Archipelagos
  • Continental shelf
  • Construction of artificial islands and other installations in the EEZ or on the continental shelf
  • Delimitation
  • Territorial sea
  • EEZ and continental shelf
  • The Area
  • The high seas
  • Freedom of navigation
  • Hot pursuit
  • Other freedoms
  • Nationality of ships
  • Warships and ships used only on government non-commercial service
  • Landlocked and geographically disadvantaged States
  • Fishing
  • In internal waters and the territorial sea
  • In EEZs
  • On the high seas
  • Shared and straddling stocks and highly migratory species
  • Sedentary species
  • Whales and other marine mammals
  • Wrecks
  • Underwater cultural heritage
  • Dispute settlement under the Convention
  • The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
  • Means of dispute settlement
  • 16 International environmental law
  • Introduction
  • What is the environment?
  • The development of international environmental law
  • Concepts
  • The precautionary approach
  • The polluter pays
  • Sustainable development
  • Environmental impact assessment (EIA)
  • Whaling
  • Other fishing
  • Wildlife
  • Biological diversity
  • The ozone layer, climate change and the Kyoto Protocol
  • Nuclear material
  • The marine environment
  • Emergencies
  • Liability
  • Dumping
  • Hazardous wastes
  • Liability for environmental damage
  • Enforcement
  • 17 International civil aviation
  • Introduction
  • International Civil Aviation Organization
  • Meaning of aircraft
  • Civil and State aircraft, induding military aircraft
  • National airspace
  • Domestic air services
  • International air services, scheduled and non-scheduled
  • International airspace
  • Civil aircraft and airlines
  • Air services agreements
  • Warsaw and Rome Conventions
  • Jurisdiction over civil aircraft
  • Use of force against aircraft
  • 18 Special regimes
  • Introduction
  • Antarctica
  • The Antarctic Treaty System (ATS)
  • The Antarctic Treaty
  • Sovereignty clause
  • Measures
  • The Environmental Protocol
  • Amendment of the Treaty and the Protocol and its Annexes
  • Secretariat
  • CCAMLR
  • The Arctic
  • Svalbard
  • Canals
  • Suez Canal
  • Panama Canal
  • Kiev Canal
  • International rivers
  • Freedom of navigation
  • Other uses of watercourses
  • Outer space
  • Outer space treaties
  • The geostationary orbit
  • The International Space Station
  • International space organisations
  • Intelsat
  • Inmarsat
  • 19 International economic law
  • Introduction
  • Bilateral investment treaties
  • A typical BIT
  • The entities protected
  • Types of investment product
  • Treatment of investments
  • Expropriation and compensation
  • Civil disturbance, etc.
  • Dispute settlement
  • Duration of BITs
  • ICSID
  • Energy Charter Treaty
  • World Trade Organization
  • Dispute Settlement
  • Panels
  • Appellate Body
  • Recommendations
  • Compensation and countermeasures
  • NAFTA
  • MERCOSUR
  • International commercial arbitration
  • 20 Succession of States
  • Introduction
  • Independence of an overseas territory
  • Secession
  • Dissolution
  • Merger
  • Absorption and extinction
  • Recovery of sovereignty
  • Transfer of territory
  • Continuity of statehood
  • Succession to treaties
  • Customary law principles
  • Former colonies and other dependent territories
  • Germany
  • Russia
  • Former Soviet republics
  • The Baltic States
  • Former Yugoslav republics
  • Czechoslovakia
  • Hong Kong and Macao
  • Succession to State property, archives and debts
  • Former Yugoslav republics
  • Membership of international organisations
  • Representation in international organisations
  • Hong Kong Special Administration Region
  • Nationality of natural persons
  • 21 State responsibility
  • Introduction
  • Terminology
  • General matters
  • The internationally wrongful act of a State
  • General principles
  • Attribution of conduct to a State
  • Organs of the State
  • Unauthorised or ultra vires conduct
  • Other conduct attributable to the State
  • Breach of an international obligation
  • Intertemporal rule
  • Extension in time of breach of an international obligation
  • Breach consisting of a composite act
  • Circumstances precluding wrongfulness
  • Content of the international responsibility of a State
  • Cessation and non-repetition
  • Reparation
  • Forms of reparation
  • Serious breaches of obligations under peremptory norms of general international law
  • The implementation of the international responsibility of a State
  • Invocation of responsibility by an injured State
  • Notice of claim by an injured State (Article 43)
  • Admissibility of claims
  • Loss of right to invoke responsibility
  • Plurality of injured or responsible States
  • Countermeasures
  • Objects and limits of countermeasures
  • Proportionality
  • Procedural conditions
  • Obligations not affected by countermeasures
  • Responsibility of an international organisation
  • Individual responsibility
  • 22 Settlement of disputes
  • Introduction
  • Informal means
  • Negotiations and consultations
  • Involvement of third parties
  • Compulsory binding settlement
  • Jurisdiction and admissibility
  • Jurisdiction
  • Admissibility
  • International arbitration
  • Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA)
  • Mixed arbitral tribunals
  • International Court of Justice
  • Composition of the ICJ
  • Jurisdiction
  • Reciprocal declarations
  • Variations of declarations
  • Admissibility
  • Intervention by third parties
  • The applicable law
  • Non-appearance
  • Provisional measures/interim measures of protection
  • Judicial review?
  • Procedure and practice
  • Judgments
  • Effect, interpretation and revision
  • Advisory opinions
  • 23 The European Union
  • Introduction
  • A brief history
  • Member States
  • European Communities, European Community or European Union?
  • Institutions
  • Council of Ministers
  • Commission
  • Parliament
  • Court of Auditors
  • Legislative procedure
  • Consultative procedure
  • Co-decision procedure
  • EU law
  • The Treaty and legislation
  • Supremacy of EU law
  • Court of Justice
  • Court of First Instance
  • Preliminary rulings
  • Common Foreign and Security Policy and Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal Matters
  • Legal personality and treaties
  • Human rights
  • Acquis communautaire
  • Competence
  • Comitology
  • European Economic Area
  • Languages
  • Qualified majority voting
  • Schengen
  • Subsidiarity
  • The Lisbon Treaty
  • Documentation
  • Index

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