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This book continues the series Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law, containing the proceedings of the Third Biennial Conference organised by ESIL and the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in 2008. The conference was entitled ''International Law in a Heterogeneous World'', reflecting an idea which is central to the ESIL philosophy. Heterogeneity is considered one of the pillars upon which Europe''s contribution to international law is built and the subject was considered in a number of panels, including such diverse topics as migration, the history of international law, the rules on warfare and international environmental law.>
Ce riche ouvrage offer ainsi une lecture trés stimulante, dans la mesure où il suscite des questions tant sur les themes traits que sur la façon de les aborder, et donc sur la doctrine internationaliste européenne elle-même.
Auteur
Hélène Ruiz Fabri is Professor of International Law and Director of the Max Plank Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law.
Rüdiger Wolfrum is Professor of international law at the University of Heidelberg and Director of the Heidelberg.Jana Gogolin is a Senior Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law.
Texte du rabat
This book is based on the 3rd biennial conference entitled 'International Law in a Heterogeneous World' which took place in 2008.
Contenu
Preface v Avant-propos Universality of International Law from the Perspective of a Practitioner Bruno Simma Democracy after the Fall of the Berlin Wall: It has ComeIt is Coming Will it Come? Rein Müllerson PART 1 INTERNATIONAL LAW AND RELIGIONS: HOW STATES COPE WITH INCREASING PLURALISM WITHIN THEIR SOCIETIES Jurisdictional Colonisation in the Spanish and British Empires: Some Reflections on a Global Public Order and the Sacred Mónica García-Salmones and Luis Eslava Of Headscarves, Mosques and Occidental Values: Does International Law Require a Culturally Neutral State? Nicola Wenzel Coping with Multiculturalism through Cosmopolitan Law Jessica Almqvist Le Rôle du Droit International Privé Face au 'Nouveau' Modèle de Migration 'Temporaire ou Circulaire': La Technique de Coopération des Autorités et Quelques Questions Relatives au Statut Personnel des Étrangers Face au Pluralisme Marina Vargas Gómez-Urrutia International Law and the Right to Have Rights Alison Kesby PART 2 HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW La Théorie Politique de l'État en Droit International: Considérations Historiques à Partir de l'Étude de Grotius Rémi Bachand Réception et Application du Droit International Moderne par le Japon: Son Attitude Évolutive de 1858 à 1945 Nishiumi Maki PART 3 INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND ADMINISTRATION Legal Problems Arising from the Dissolution of International Organisations: The Case of the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization (KEDO): Dissolution de facto or Hibernation? Ki Gab Park Countermeasures by International Organisations: The Decentralised Society in the Heart of the Institutionalised Society Frédéric Dopagne Meeting the Challenges of Global Governance: Administrative and Constitutional Approaches Euan MacDonald and Eran Shamir-Borer PART 4 LEGITIMACY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW The Rapprochement between the Supremacy of International Law at International and National Levels André Nollkaemper Natural Law and the Possibility of Universal Normative Foundations Bebhinn Donnelly-Lazarov Legitimacy, Blind Spots and Paradoxes of Personality Russell A Miller PART 5 THE MULTIPLICITY OF LAW-MAKING PROCESSES The Doctrinal Illusion of the Heterogeneity of International Law-Making Processes Jean D'Aspremont Gap-Filling as Law-Making: The Examples of the Ad Hoc International Criminal Tribunals Mia Swart Norm Conflict in International Law:Whither Human Rights? Marko Milanovic Strategic Use of Litigation to Influence Negotiations: The WTO, the EU and the UN: Use of Litigation to Influence Negotiations Markus W Gehring PART 6 HETEROGENEITY REFLECTED IN INTERNATIONAL LEGAL TRADITIONS Le Droit International Post-Sovietique en Quête de son Identité dans un Monde Hétérogène Rima Tkatova L'hétérogénéité dans la Justice Internationale: Le Cas de la Cour Internationale de Justice Sana Ouechtati On Multilingualism and the International Legal Process Gleider I Hernández PART 7 INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS Governing by Measuring:The Millennium Development Goals in Global Governance Kerry Rittich The MDGs, Archeology, Institutional Fragmention and International Law: Human Rights, International Enviromental and Sustainable (Development) Law Ellen Hey Untying Aid and Achieving the Millennium Development Goals: Enhancing Aid Effectiveness through the Legal Framework for International Trade Annamaria La Chimia PART 8 REFOCUSING THE RULES ON WARFARE Application of International Humanitarian Law to Contemporary Peace Operations: Mapping the 'Grey Areas' Dominika varc Military Necessity: A Fundamental 'Principle' Fallen Into Oblivion Robin Geiß The 'Civilianisation' of Contemporary Armed Conflicts Giulio Bartolini L'attribution aux États des Actes des Sociétés Militaires Privées et de leurs Employés à la Lumière de l'article 4 du Projet d'articles sur la Responsabilité Internationale des États de 2001 Hébié Mamadou PART 9 INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW Law and Policy Issues of Unilateral Geoengineering: Moving to a Managed World Gareth Davies Sustainable Development as a Legal Principle: A Rhetorical Analysis Jaye Ellis The Standards of Compensation for Foreign Investment Expropriations in International Law: Internalising Environmental Costs? Saverio Di Benedetto PART 10 OTHERS: THE MEDIA, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND INTERNATIONAL CRIME International Law and the Media: Envisioning the Media Daniel Joyce From Social Justice to Decent Work: Is the Shift in the ILO Significant For International Law? Anne Trebilcock Victim Participation in Proceedings before the International Criminal Court Gauthier De Beco PART 11 FINAL ROUND TABLE