We found that the post-World War II international security system as provided for in the United Nations Charter has adapted to a variety of new tasks, but that it remains incomplete. We discovered that the UN Charter system as a means to restrain the use of force has perhaps developed more fully than the Charter system\u27s ability to authorize and to enable states to use force in situations other than a clear cross border invasion of a member state. At the same time, we recognized that the existence of an international institution like the United Nations has fundamentally changed the character of international politics in two ways. First, the fact that international institutions are based on assumptions of sovereign equality affects the re...
This essay criticizes the United Nations Charter\u27s standard for the use of force, and outlines a ...
Were the Charter a static instrument bound exclusively to the textually expressed intent of its draf...
The United Nations, as an organisation created by equal sovereign states and built upon a single set...
We found that the post-World War II international security system as provided for in the United Nati...
In an appreciation of Harold Jacobson written for the American Journal of International Law, the aut...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Article 1(1) of the UN Charter states the primary purpose of the international organization thus: T...
The UN Charter reflects the drafters’ singular focus on creating a political system to govern confli...
When the United Nations was created in 1945, its main purpose was to deal with threats to internatio...
When the United Nations (UN) was formed, one of its most important goals was to render war obsolete....
Since, at least, the Persian Gulf War, states have behaved as if it is costly to be unsuccessful in ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Brill via the link in th...
This presentation derives from a large research project that has been more than three years in progr...
After two years of close observation of the United Nations struggling to answer the challenge of Art...
Pressure on traditional notions of US sovereignty are nowhere clearer than in the area of national s...
This essay criticizes the United Nations Charter\u27s standard for the use of force, and outlines a ...
Were the Charter a static instrument bound exclusively to the textually expressed intent of its draf...
The United Nations, as an organisation created by equal sovereign states and built upon a single set...
We found that the post-World War II international security system as provided for in the United Nati...
In an appreciation of Harold Jacobson written for the American Journal of International Law, the aut...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Article 1(1) of the UN Charter states the primary purpose of the international organization thus: T...
The UN Charter reflects the drafters’ singular focus on creating a political system to govern confli...
When the United Nations was created in 1945, its main purpose was to deal with threats to internatio...
When the United Nations (UN) was formed, one of its most important goals was to render war obsolete....
Since, at least, the Persian Gulf War, states have behaved as if it is costly to be unsuccessful in ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Brill via the link in th...
This presentation derives from a large research project that has been more than three years in progr...
After two years of close observation of the United Nations struggling to answer the challenge of Art...
Pressure on traditional notions of US sovereignty are nowhere clearer than in the area of national s...
This essay criticizes the United Nations Charter\u27s standard for the use of force, and outlines a ...
Were the Charter a static instrument bound exclusively to the textually expressed intent of its draf...
The United Nations, as an organisation created by equal sovereign states and built upon a single set...