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Essays in honour of Wang Tieya

Autor
Macdonald R.S. (ed)
Fecha
1994
Fuente
IUCN (ID: MON-051824)
Editor | Lugar de publicación
Martinus Nijhoff | Dordrecht, The Netherlands
ISBN
0-7923-2469-2
Páginas
964 p.
Idioma
Inglés
Campo de aplicación
Internacional
Materia
Medio ambiente gen.
Resumen

Contents: 1. International law and international community: the long road to universality; 2. 'Law is my idol': John C.H.Wu and the role of legality and spirituality in the effort to modernise China; 3. Assessment of compensation of expropriated foreign property: three critical problems; 4. UNCLOS, UNCED, and the restructuring of the United Nations system; 5. International law in the law school curriculum; 6. The decisions of political organs of the United Nations and the rule of law; 7. Some comments on high seas fishing and international laww 8. The law of international waterways and its sources; 9. Self-determination of peoples and the recent break-up of USSR and Yugoslavia; 10.International responsibility and liability of states forr national activities in outer space especially by non- governmental entities; 11.The peaceful settlement of disputes: new grounds for optimism? 12.The problem of delimiting the maritime boundary between the exclusive economic zone and the continental shelf off opposite states; 13.Ethnocentrism and the teaching of international law; 14.Equity in matters of state succession; 15.European biodiversity: The Bern Convention of 19.09.79 on the conservation of European wildlife and natural habitats; 16.The position of the manufacturer and the insurer in space law in connection with cases in space; 17.The unilateral enforcement of international law by exercising reprisals; 18.China's practice of international law - patterns from the past; 19.Sovereign immunity in the Chinese case and its implications for the future of international law; 20.Marine pollution and spoilation of natural resources as war measures:a note on some international law problems in the Gulf war; 21.Law, moral philosophy and economics in environmental discourse; 22.Lessons from the first decade of the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea: reservations and progress towards entry into force; 23.Wang Tieya; 24.The mythology of sovereignty; 25.'Legal system' and 'rule of law' in Chinese legal science; 26.Asia and the developments in the Law of the Sea 1983-92;; 27.Sovereignty and international law: Hobbes and Grotius; 28.Reflections on the term 'dispute' 29.Regional fishery arrangements: options for Northeast Asia; 30.Sovereignty in the Chinese image of world order; 31.Change and stability in the international system: China secures revision of the unequal treaties; 32.Straddling and migratory fish stocks in the new law of the sea: reconciling rights, freedoms and responsibilities; 33.Some thoughts on equality; 34.The right of victims of war to compensation; 35.International law reaching out; 36.The Gulf war and the United Nations Security Council; 37.Evidence before the International Court of Justice; 38.An interpretation of the negotiating process of UNCLOS III; 39.Self-determination of peoples and the dissolution of the USSR; 40.Governance of Antarctica; 41.A way to think about international law; 42.The former Yugoslav Federation and international law; 44.The English language and the common law: China and Hong Kong after 1997; 45.Sovereignty - then and now; 46.Humanitarian assistance, humanitarian interference and international law; 47.Developments in international investment law; 48.Developing countries and the idea of international law; 49.International law in the municipal legal order of Asian states: virgin land; 50.European Community law and international economic relations: the saga of Thai Manioc; 51.Relevance of European Convention on Human Rights outsidee the jurisdiction of the contracting states; 52.Reflections on the articulation of international judicial decisions and the problem of 'Mootness'; 53.History and international law in Asia: a time for review? 54.The Asian states and International Labour Conventions; 55.Human rights in a multi-cultural world: the need for continued dialogue; 56.China and the Hague Conference on private international law; 58.The European system of human rights protection: present and future;