This article\u27s two-pronged analysis has three distinct parts. Part I lays out the controversy of Article 51 interpretation as applied to the recent Gulf Crisis. Part II examines the legal guidance for interpreting the U.N. Charter, the Charter\u27s travaux preparatoires, and specifically the work of the committees and subcommittees responsible for drafting and amending articles that fully incorporate the right of self-defense into the Charter. This Part develops conclusions on Article 51 that may be applied to the context of the recent Gulf Crisis. This Part also contrasts the Article 51 right of collective self-defense with the right of regional organizations to take action. Finally, Part III looks at the application of Article 51 in th...
The following article reorients mainstream conceptions of self-defense by defending a broader doctri...
Focusing upon the perennial issue of the temporal scope of the right of self-defence in internationa...
The first condition for the legal use of force in self-defence is that the state exercising this rig...
This article\u27s two-pronged analysis has three distinct parts. Part I lays out the controversy of ...
This article discusses the views of these commentators in the light of the language, history, and po...
Article 51 of the United Nations Charter preserves the right of nations to use military force in sel...
While Article 2, Para. 4 of UN Charter refrain all member states from threat or use of force against...
Self-defence, recognised by article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, is considered as a prim...
The subsequent three parts of this article take the following form. Part II introduces Article 51. P...
The Charter of the United Nations wasthought to establish a normative order, maintain international ...
This article examines one legal criterion for the exercise of the right of self-defense that has bee...
The inherent right of self-defence in international law is part of international customary law and r...
With the collapse of the Iron Curtain and the increasing depolarization of the international communi...
The concept of self defense is one field of international law that has generated, and continues to g...
An important question of public international law unresolved by the existing scholarly debate is whe...
The following article reorients mainstream conceptions of self-defense by defending a broader doctri...
Focusing upon the perennial issue of the temporal scope of the right of self-defence in internationa...
The first condition for the legal use of force in self-defence is that the state exercising this rig...
This article\u27s two-pronged analysis has three distinct parts. Part I lays out the controversy of ...
This article discusses the views of these commentators in the light of the language, history, and po...
Article 51 of the United Nations Charter preserves the right of nations to use military force in sel...
While Article 2, Para. 4 of UN Charter refrain all member states from threat or use of force against...
Self-defence, recognised by article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, is considered as a prim...
The subsequent three parts of this article take the following form. Part II introduces Article 51. P...
The Charter of the United Nations wasthought to establish a normative order, maintain international ...
This article examines one legal criterion for the exercise of the right of self-defense that has bee...
The inherent right of self-defence in international law is part of international customary law and r...
With the collapse of the Iron Curtain and the increasing depolarization of the international communi...
The concept of self defense is one field of international law that has generated, and continues to g...
An important question of public international law unresolved by the existing scholarly debate is whe...
The following article reorients mainstream conceptions of self-defense by defending a broader doctri...
Focusing upon the perennial issue of the temporal scope of the right of self-defence in internationa...
The first condition for the legal use of force in self-defence is that the state exercising this rig...