Description
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- Cover
- Title Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1. International Law and the Struggle for World Peace
- The Peace Movement in the Nineteenth Century
- The Complex Web of Alliances in Nineteenth-Century Europe
- The First Hague Peace Conference
- The International Law of Neutrality
- 2. The Treaty of Versailles as a Tentative Trial Run
- The League of Nations
- The Kellogg-Briand Pact
- The Twenty Years’ Crisis
- 3. The UN Charter Regime on the Use of Force
- A New Epoch in International Law: The Founding of the United Nations
- Would the U.S. Senate Reject the UN as It Had the League?
- The Peaceful Resolution of International Disputes and the Role of the International Court of Justice
- The UN Charter Enters the Nuclear Age
- 4. Key Challenges to the General Prohibition on the Use of Force
- Should Article 2(4) Be Interpreted Broadly or Narrowly?
- Is It Legal to Intervene with Force If Invited to Do So?
- Is Humanitarian Intervention Compatible with Article 2(4)?
- What Is the Status in International Law of the Responsibility to Protect?
- Nuclear Weapons: The Ultimate Challenge to the Charter Framework
- 5. The Right of Self-Defense
- The Caroline Incident and the Customary Right of Self-Defense
- Article 51 of the UN Charter
- Anticipatory Self-Defense
- Pre-Emptive Self-Defense
- Collective Self-Defense
- The Protection of Nationals
- Nuclear Weapons and Self-Defense
- 6. The Crime of Aggression
- The Nuremberg and Tokyo Trials and the Criminality of Aggressive War
- The Prohibition of Aggression in the UN Era
- The Crime of Aggression in the Statute of the International Criminal Court
- 7. Can Collective Security Work?
- Where Collective Security Has Been Invoked
- After Kuwait: A New World Order
- The General Assembly Takes Over: Uniting for Peace and Suez
- Where Collective Security Has Not Been Invoked: India’s Occupation of Goa
- A Matter of Self-Defense and Self-Help: Tanzania’s Overthrow of Idi Amin of Uganda
- 8. Terrorism, International Law, and the Use of Force
- The Definition of Terrorism in International Law
- The International Legal Framework to Combat Terrorism
- The UN Security Council and Terrorism as a Threat to Peace and Security
- Afghanistan and Operation Enduring Freedom
- The Practice of Detaining “Illegal Enemy Combatants”
- 9. Was the U.S. Invasion of Iraq Legal?
- The Basis for Action
- The British Interpretation: The Goldsmith Advice
- The Trouble with Intelligence: Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction
- 10. Conclusions: Has the International Law Relating to the Use of Force Created a More Peaceful World?
- The Adequacy of the Charter Regime to Address Contemporary Issues
- Select Bibliography
- Index
- About The Authors
- eCopyright




