Professor Anand over the past two-and-a-half decades has established himself as one of the leading Third World publicists of international law. Less rhetorical than some, but just as vigorous, he has championed the development of a new international law based on cooperation in rejection of the old traditional and Eurocentric international law. In International Law and the Developing Countries Professor Anand brings together a collection of his previously published essays and wields them into a book for the purpose of evaluating the traditional law and the process of change that it is undergoing to become a communal law of mankind
After a detailed examination of the unique position of the emerging nations, the third \u27world, ...
The Liber Amicorum is published on the occasion of the retirement of Professor Božidar Bakotić from ...
The aim of this collection of essays in Robin Churchill's honour to discuss the key examples of the ...
When the international community first became interested in the problem of human rights during the s...
This Volume comes on our fifth anniversary and as such, exhibits the growth and development, both of...
In 1976 Carl Heymanns Verlag published the first volume of a series on Japanese law. A recent additi...
Ever since its inception over a century ago, the Red Cross has been providing protection and assista...
B.S. Chimni’s stimulating article makes an important contribution to the burgeoning literature on cu...
World Peace (And How We Can Achieve It) looks towards a future where there is increasingly optimisti...
One of the paramount problems of our time is how law, including international law, can be made best ...
This article traces the emergence of an international law of disaster relief from a patchwork of nor...
“Whether International Law is really law is one of those vexed questions that still linger. Prof. Mw...
This Article delves into the reasons for the current crisis in the traditional international law sys...
International law well-illustrates this more nuanced understanding of law. This article will consid...
International Economic Law, Globalization and Developing Countries explores the impact of globalizat...
After a detailed examination of the unique position of the emerging nations, the third \u27world, ...
The Liber Amicorum is published on the occasion of the retirement of Professor Božidar Bakotić from ...
The aim of this collection of essays in Robin Churchill's honour to discuss the key examples of the ...
When the international community first became interested in the problem of human rights during the s...
This Volume comes on our fifth anniversary and as such, exhibits the growth and development, both of...
In 1976 Carl Heymanns Verlag published the first volume of a series on Japanese law. A recent additi...
Ever since its inception over a century ago, the Red Cross has been providing protection and assista...
B.S. Chimni’s stimulating article makes an important contribution to the burgeoning literature on cu...
World Peace (And How We Can Achieve It) looks towards a future where there is increasingly optimisti...
One of the paramount problems of our time is how law, including international law, can be made best ...
This article traces the emergence of an international law of disaster relief from a patchwork of nor...
“Whether International Law is really law is one of those vexed questions that still linger. Prof. Mw...
This Article delves into the reasons for the current crisis in the traditional international law sys...
International law well-illustrates this more nuanced understanding of law. This article will consid...
International Economic Law, Globalization and Developing Countries explores the impact of globalizat...
After a detailed examination of the unique position of the emerging nations, the third \u27world, ...
The Liber Amicorum is published on the occasion of the retirement of Professor Božidar Bakotić from ...
The aim of this collection of essays in Robin Churchill's honour to discuss the key examples of the ...