This article considers the (in)ability of international law to ensure compliance from United Nations (UN) Member States, absent political influence. It examines whether concepts such as sovereign equality, normativity and concreteness give legal authority to international law, and further whether this ‘authority’ is respected by Member States and strictly enforced by UN governing bodies and international courts. The article explains that where sovereign rights or national interests collide the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is often unable to give a ruling or advisory opinion based solely on legal grounds and demonstrates that the contemporary international regime is incapable of removing politics from international legal proceedings....
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
This article shows that an important part of the deep structure of international law is its self-ref...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
This article explores the evolution and role of contemporary international law vis-a-vis internation...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
The article examines the contours and implications of the emerging international constitutional orde...
Can international law be enforced against a state? Against a superpower? Various current theories an...
The article examines the contours and implications of the emerging international constitutional orde...
If international law is all but irrelevant to international relations why do states spend so much ti...
International law was traditionally a horizontal and state-centric system of rules. Although state-c...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
This article shows that an important part of the deep structure of international law is its self-ref...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
This article explores the evolution and role of contemporary international law vis-a-vis internation...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
The article examines the contours and implications of the emerging international constitutional orde...
Can international law be enforced against a state? Against a superpower? Various current theories an...
The article examines the contours and implications of the emerging international constitutional orde...
If international law is all but irrelevant to international relations why do states spend so much ti...
International law was traditionally a horizontal and state-centric system of rules. Although state-c...
This paper asks two questions. First, is it the case, as some have claimed, that principles of democ...
International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within internat...
This article shows that an important part of the deep structure of international law is its self-ref...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...