Assuming the existence of nuclear weapons as a reality of international relations that cannot simply be wished away, this essay explores what HLA Hart calls the ‘minimum content of natural law’ as applied to international law, as well as its consequences for primary rules in that system. Even if we were to concede, ad arguendum, Hart’s point about the lack of secondary rules in international law, it is still worth exploring whether primary rules are the same for individuals in domestic legal systems as for states in the international legal order, on account of the differences in power and the special deterrents that characterise international relations, as opposed to the ‘approximate equality’ of individuals
Concern now focuses on the threat to humankind posed by nuclear weapons to an extent not seen since ...
In the past two decades, a series of major multilateral treaties were created in the absence of supp...
Many who speak of the end of the Cold War emphasize the improvement in international relations when ...
Since 1989, there has been a general sense that we are living through the end of an era of internati...
This article analyzes the current status of the International Nuclear Law. It contains arguments in ...
The papers in this symposium have posed three questions which have not been kept distinct. The first...
The nuclear tests conducted by India and Pakistan in 1998 have given rise to a concern that the hist...
Nowadays, various subjects of international law, including criminalization of use of nuclear weapon...
This Note argues that customary international law does not prohibit the use of nuclear weapons in se...
Deployment of nuclear forces as an international security mechanism for prevention of major war is f...
The nuclear genie is out of the bottle, manifesting as nuclear proliferation. Efforts to contain it ...
This article deals with some of the problems associated with modern international- legal science as...
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) comprehensively and unequivocally prohibits ...
Jonathan Swift famously said, Laws are like cobwebs, which may catch small flies, but let wasps and...
This essay is about the power of the international law of nonproliferation- its mounting power in th...
Concern now focuses on the threat to humankind posed by nuclear weapons to an extent not seen since ...
In the past two decades, a series of major multilateral treaties were created in the absence of supp...
Many who speak of the end of the Cold War emphasize the improvement in international relations when ...
Since 1989, there has been a general sense that we are living through the end of an era of internati...
This article analyzes the current status of the International Nuclear Law. It contains arguments in ...
The papers in this symposium have posed three questions which have not been kept distinct. The first...
The nuclear tests conducted by India and Pakistan in 1998 have given rise to a concern that the hist...
Nowadays, various subjects of international law, including criminalization of use of nuclear weapon...
This Note argues that customary international law does not prohibit the use of nuclear weapons in se...
Deployment of nuclear forces as an international security mechanism for prevention of major war is f...
The nuclear genie is out of the bottle, manifesting as nuclear proliferation. Efforts to contain it ...
This article deals with some of the problems associated with modern international- legal science as...
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) comprehensively and unequivocally prohibits ...
Jonathan Swift famously said, Laws are like cobwebs, which may catch small flies, but let wasps and...
This essay is about the power of the international law of nonproliferation- its mounting power in th...
Concern now focuses on the threat to humankind posed by nuclear weapons to an extent not seen since ...
In the past two decades, a series of major multilateral treaties were created in the absence of supp...
Many who speak of the end of the Cold War emphasize the improvement in international relations when ...