Force and the Charter is a very complex problem. It imports not merely the place of force in the relations of States within the Charter of the United Nations, but also the residual rules of international law, which themselves are very much older-several centuries older at least-than the United Nations. These are the residual rules of international law, customary international law, as we call it, concerning the use of force, insofar as the Charter has not abrogated those rules
Until 1945, there was no customary international prohibition on the unilateral resort to force. If t...
On August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded and swiftly occupied its neighbor, Kuwait. Within hours, the United ...
It is incontrovertible that the prohibition of the unilateral use of force is a fundamental aspect o...
Since the adoption of the U.N. Charter in 1945, there has been almost continuous debate regarding th...
The fortieth anniversary of the United Nations has occasioned both celebration and sober reassessmen...
The United Nations Charter's use of force paradigm prohibits all uses of force by states except in r...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Following horrible experiences of the World War II, States have agreed to outlaw the use of force an...
Much of the international legal debate about regulating force and self-defence takes place on a subs...
Since the adoption of this article the meaning of the word force has been disputed by political lead...
The question posed is the most important issue in world politics: under what circumstances may state...
The most important, and certainly the most ambitious, modification of international law in this cent...
This thesis deals with the concept of use of force under UN system. It discusses the meaning of wa...
This essay criticizes the United Nations Charter\u27s standard for the use of force, and outlines a ...
This chapter concerns the central international legal rule against violence: Article 2(4) of the Uni...
Until 1945, there was no customary international prohibition on the unilateral resort to force. If t...
On August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded and swiftly occupied its neighbor, Kuwait. Within hours, the United ...
It is incontrovertible that the prohibition of the unilateral use of force is a fundamental aspect o...
Since the adoption of the U.N. Charter in 1945, there has been almost continuous debate regarding th...
The fortieth anniversary of the United Nations has occasioned both celebration and sober reassessmen...
The United Nations Charter's use of force paradigm prohibits all uses of force by states except in r...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Following horrible experiences of the World War II, States have agreed to outlaw the use of force an...
Much of the international legal debate about regulating force and self-defence takes place on a subs...
Since the adoption of this article the meaning of the word force has been disputed by political lead...
The question posed is the most important issue in world politics: under what circumstances may state...
The most important, and certainly the most ambitious, modification of international law in this cent...
This thesis deals with the concept of use of force under UN system. It discusses the meaning of wa...
This essay criticizes the United Nations Charter\u27s standard for the use of force, and outlines a ...
This chapter concerns the central international legal rule against violence: Article 2(4) of the Uni...
Until 1945, there was no customary international prohibition on the unilateral resort to force. If t...
On August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded and swiftly occupied its neighbor, Kuwait. Within hours, the United ...
It is incontrovertible that the prohibition of the unilateral use of force is a fundamental aspect o...