In two separate judgments of December 20, 1974, the majority of the International Court of Justice3 held that the objectives of both Australia and New Zealand in ending French nuclear testing in the South Pacific had been accomplished by virtue of various public announcements made on behalf of the French government that, following the conclusion of the 1974 series of tests, France would revdrt to underground testing. Since the objectives of both applicants had been accomplished, and consequently the issues had been resolved, the Court was of the view that it was no longer called upon to give a decision thereon
The article of record as published may be located at http://www.jstor.org/stable/20047471France cond...
Forty-four years after the ICJ provisional measures orders in the Nuclear Test Cases requesting Fran...
French nuclear tests and the controversial draft Pacific logging code of practice drew most of the m...
In two separate judgments of December 20, 1974, the majority of the International Court of Justice3 ...
This article discusses the action taken by New Zealand following Jacques Chirac’s announcement that ...
In a recent article entitled French Nuclear Tests and Article 41: Another Blow to the Authority of ...
Even at the level of scholarly or diplomatic argumentation it is important to inquire into the compe...
For the student of sociology of law (and especially for one in the tradition of Julius Stone) the mo...
The International Court of Justice recently bowed to nuclear weapons States and disappointed the res...
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has dealt with the problems connected with nuclear weapons ...
The study deals with the International Court of Justice’s position about the atmospheric nuclear tes...
This articles considers the concept of legal disputes in international law. On 5 October 2016, the I...
Between 1952 and 1957 there were 12 full-scale nuclear weapons tests on Australian soil. The tests w...
In June 1995, the newly elected president of France, Jacques Chirac, announced that his government w...
In 2014, the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) filed lawsuits against several major Nuclear Wea...
The article of record as published may be located at http://www.jstor.org/stable/20047471France cond...
Forty-four years after the ICJ provisional measures orders in the Nuclear Test Cases requesting Fran...
French nuclear tests and the controversial draft Pacific logging code of practice drew most of the m...
In two separate judgments of December 20, 1974, the majority of the International Court of Justice3 ...
This article discusses the action taken by New Zealand following Jacques Chirac’s announcement that ...
In a recent article entitled French Nuclear Tests and Article 41: Another Blow to the Authority of ...
Even at the level of scholarly or diplomatic argumentation it is important to inquire into the compe...
For the student of sociology of law (and especially for one in the tradition of Julius Stone) the mo...
The International Court of Justice recently bowed to nuclear weapons States and disappointed the res...
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has dealt with the problems connected with nuclear weapons ...
The study deals with the International Court of Justice’s position about the atmospheric nuclear tes...
This articles considers the concept of legal disputes in international law. On 5 October 2016, the I...
Between 1952 and 1957 there were 12 full-scale nuclear weapons tests on Australian soil. The tests w...
In June 1995, the newly elected president of France, Jacques Chirac, announced that his government w...
In 2014, the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) filed lawsuits against several major Nuclear Wea...
The article of record as published may be located at http://www.jstor.org/stable/20047471France cond...
Forty-four years after the ICJ provisional measures orders in the Nuclear Test Cases requesting Fran...
French nuclear tests and the controversial draft Pacific logging code of practice drew most of the m...