In most enlightened legal systems the unilateral resort to armed force is justified, excused, or met with sanctions of diminished severity only when it is the sole means available to resist some imminent threat of violence. Obliged to coexist, sometimes even to adopt one another\u27s techniques and appearances, law and force nonetheless represent rival cultures. Recognition of this fact with respect to international relations helps place in proper perspective recent attempts to dislodge Article 2(4) from its intended moorings or, indeed, to eliminate altogether the obligation it embodies
The use of military force by one state on anotherâs territory with the consent of its government has...
This article focuses on three instances of the use of armed force in international relations. The th...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
In most enlightened legal systems the unilateral resort to armed force is justified, excused, or met...
It always lies within the power of a state, the American doctrinalist Charles Cheney Hyde wrote in ...
Until 1945, there was no customary international prohibition on the unilateral resort to force. If t...
The question posed is the most important issue in world politics: under what circumstances may state...
This chapter concerns the central international legal rule against violence: Article 2(4) of the Uni...
Law includes a system of authorized coercion in which force is used to maintain and enhance public o...
The Article starts by investigating the manner in which the prohibition to use force is being increm...
Since the adoption of the U.N. Charter in 1945, there has been almost continuous debate regarding th...
Are constitutional democracies more inclined than other kinds of regimes to observe the internationa...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Within the jus contra bellum there is an apparent contradiction between states’ verbal commitments t...
This thesis consists in a critical analysis of international law’s traditional historical narrative ...
The use of military force by one state on anotherâs territory with the consent of its government has...
This article focuses on three instances of the use of armed force in international relations. The th...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
In most enlightened legal systems the unilateral resort to armed force is justified, excused, or met...
It always lies within the power of a state, the American doctrinalist Charles Cheney Hyde wrote in ...
Until 1945, there was no customary international prohibition on the unilateral resort to force. If t...
The question posed is the most important issue in world politics: under what circumstances may state...
This chapter concerns the central international legal rule against violence: Article 2(4) of the Uni...
Law includes a system of authorized coercion in which force is used to maintain and enhance public o...
The Article starts by investigating the manner in which the prohibition to use force is being increm...
Since the adoption of the U.N. Charter in 1945, there has been almost continuous debate regarding th...
Are constitutional democracies more inclined than other kinds of regimes to observe the internationa...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
Within the jus contra bellum there is an apparent contradiction between states’ verbal commitments t...
This thesis consists in a critical analysis of international law’s traditional historical narrative ...
The use of military force by one state on anotherâs territory with the consent of its government has...
This article focuses on three instances of the use of armed force in international relations. The th...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...