Droit international | Page 5
Le droit de l’OMC et l’agriculture : Analyse critique et prospective du système de régulation des subventions agricoles
Dire que l’agriculture soit indispensable à la vie et son développement, nécessaire à la survie de l’espèce est d’une telle évidence que cette réaffirmation en devient presque redondante. Malheureusement, la prise en compte de cette réalité implacable au plan multilatéral depuis le GATT de 1947 a conduit à la formalisation d’un cadre juridique construit à […] Lire la suite
Institutional Implications of Turkish EU Accession
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law
Abstract: The nature of the relationship between international humanitarian law and international human rights law remains a vexed one. In recent years, human rights lawyers and activists have sought to apply human rights norms to military conduct in international and internal conflicts, and during belligerent occupations. With varying degrees of success, complainants have brought their […] Lire la suite
The Energy Charter Treaty in de Brabandere
The EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and E-commerce
The “Injured State” in Case of Breach of a Non-Proliferation Treaty and the Legal Consequences of Such a Breach
The ‘Injured State’ in Case of Breach of a Non-Proliferation Treaty and the Legal Consequences of Such a Breach
Abstract: This chapter covers issues of State responsibility for breaches of non-proliferation treaties. It examines firstly which States can react to which breaches of non-proliferation treaties; in particular, which State parties should be considered to be ‘injured States’ and in what circumstances State parties which are not ‘injured States’ can nevertheless advance claims for breach. […] Lire la suite
Protecting Children in Armed Conflict: Harnessing the Security Council’s ‘Soft Power’
Abstract: The United Nations Security Council’s recent involvement in the protection of children in armed conflict, particularly by seeking to prevent the recruitment and use of child soldiers, has attracted little attention from international lawyers. However, the process, initiated by Council Resolution 1612, has interesting parallels with non-compliance mechanisms in international environmental law and can […] Lire la suite
International Law in a Multipolar World
Since the creation of the United Nations in 1945, international law has sought to configure itself as a universal system. Yet, despite the best efforts of international institutions, scholars and others to assert the universal application of international law, its relevance and applicability has been influenced, if not directed, by political power.Today, the « decline of […] Lire la suite