This work studies causation in the law of international State responsibility. It is submitted that the absence of causation as an element of the internationally wrongful act owes more to the structure of international law, than to the inadequateness of causation as a conceptual and legal construct to ascribe international responsibility. The lack of causal analysis for breach owes to the subsidiary role of primary rules in the process of determining the existence of an internationally wrongful act. Primary rules are even less relevant for the determination of reparations, which stem from injury arising from the international wrong. Moreover, international law carries out the attribution of wrongful conduct pursuant to the agency theory, whi...
There exists a range of situations where non-state actors and states can possibly share responsibili...
After briefly summarizing the classical doctrine of state responsibility, Part One will discuss whet...
The international law of state responsibility determines when states are liable for international la...
Causation has, at the very minimum, two functions in legal responsibility regimes. First, there is n...
This article is devoted to the responsibility of the states under international law. It has the anal...
This thesis investigates the often-voiced concern that the expanding activities of international org...
This study discusses international responsibility for illegal actions and its governing principles. ...
This article addresses the preliminary steps that must be taken in order to study the problems stemm...
The article is devoted to the study of the theory of absolute liability in international law. Since ...
At its fifty-third session (2001), the International Law Commission (ILC) finally adopted a complet...
This Article assesses the relation between State responsibility under international law and internat...
The subjects’ responsibility for violations of their obligations is incident to any legal syst...
There exists a range of situations where non-state actors and states can possibly share responsibili...
The end of the Cold War and the bipolar world order caused a lot of controversial questions about th...
The international law of state responsibility determines when states are liable for international la...
There exists a range of situations where non-state actors and states can possibly share responsibili...
After briefly summarizing the classical doctrine of state responsibility, Part One will discuss whet...
The international law of state responsibility determines when states are liable for international la...
Causation has, at the very minimum, two functions in legal responsibility regimes. First, there is n...
This article is devoted to the responsibility of the states under international law. It has the anal...
This thesis investigates the often-voiced concern that the expanding activities of international org...
This study discusses international responsibility for illegal actions and its governing principles. ...
This article addresses the preliminary steps that must be taken in order to study the problems stemm...
The article is devoted to the study of the theory of absolute liability in international law. Since ...
At its fifty-third session (2001), the International Law Commission (ILC) finally adopted a complet...
This Article assesses the relation between State responsibility under international law and internat...
The subjects’ responsibility for violations of their obligations is incident to any legal syst...
There exists a range of situations where non-state actors and states can possibly share responsibili...
The end of the Cold War and the bipolar world order caused a lot of controversial questions about th...
The international law of state responsibility determines when states are liable for international la...
There exists a range of situations where non-state actors and states can possibly share responsibili...
After briefly summarizing the classical doctrine of state responsibility, Part One will discuss whet...
The international law of state responsibility determines when states are liable for international la...