Certain UN organs continue to resist procedural limitations on their decisionmaking authority. Yet, paradoxically, failure to accord due process has compromised the strength of UN authority, as seen in relation to the targeted-sanctions regime and the Haiti cholera outbreak that began following the arrival of UN peacekeepers in 2010. This article questions current, formalistic approaches to due process in the UN setting—which rely on traditional sources of international law. As an alternative, it presents a value-based approach that takes into account instrumentalist, dignitarian, and public interest principles
Jus cogens are a species of supernorm in international law. They are universally binding and trump a...
The expansion of UN peacekeeping operations has made it possible for human rights violations to be c...
This article analyses why the UN's members delegate resources to the UN Secretariat in the sensitive...
Certain UN organs continue to resist procedural limitations on their decisionmaking authority. Yet, ...
Devika Hovell raises deeply significant questions about the role of due process in the legitimacy of...
Devika Hovell has provided an excellent call to arms for academics to move beyond the question of w...
It is argued in this article that due diligence, grounded on positive duties under international hum...
Ban Ki-Moon’s apology for the role of the UN in the cholera outbreak in Haiti, reignited the debate ...
The UN Security Council's transition to 'targeted sanctions' in the 1990s marked a revolutionary shi...
Following the devastating 2010 earthquake, the world’s largest cholera epidemic broke out on the isl...
For a body committed to the rule of law in theory, the applicability of the rule of law to the Unite...
Due diligence is a well-recognized, deliberately flexible standard in international law. It has been...
This thesis examines compliance with international human rights law in United Nations (UN) operation...
This article will analyze the issue of UN’s absolute immunity, in particular in the case of the comp...
A certain degree of judicial discretion with respect to procedural matters is fundamental to all dis...
Jus cogens are a species of supernorm in international law. They are universally binding and trump a...
The expansion of UN peacekeeping operations has made it possible for human rights violations to be c...
This article analyses why the UN's members delegate resources to the UN Secretariat in the sensitive...
Certain UN organs continue to resist procedural limitations on their decisionmaking authority. Yet, ...
Devika Hovell raises deeply significant questions about the role of due process in the legitimacy of...
Devika Hovell has provided an excellent call to arms for academics to move beyond the question of w...
It is argued in this article that due diligence, grounded on positive duties under international hum...
Ban Ki-Moon’s apology for the role of the UN in the cholera outbreak in Haiti, reignited the debate ...
The UN Security Council's transition to 'targeted sanctions' in the 1990s marked a revolutionary shi...
Following the devastating 2010 earthquake, the world’s largest cholera epidemic broke out on the isl...
For a body committed to the rule of law in theory, the applicability of the rule of law to the Unite...
Due diligence is a well-recognized, deliberately flexible standard in international law. It has been...
This thesis examines compliance with international human rights law in United Nations (UN) operation...
This article will analyze the issue of UN’s absolute immunity, in particular in the case of the comp...
A certain degree of judicial discretion with respect to procedural matters is fundamental to all dis...
Jus cogens are a species of supernorm in international law. They are universally binding and trump a...
The expansion of UN peacekeeping operations has made it possible for human rights violations to be c...
This article analyses why the UN's members delegate resources to the UN Secretariat in the sensitive...