International Law and Organization: Closing the Compliance GapMichael W. Doyle, Edward C. Luck Rowman & Littlefield, 2004 - 348 lappuses The last decade of the twentieth century was a heyday for the development of international norms and agreements. Non-state actors and states joined together in codifying new international standards in areas as diverse as arms control, war crimes, human rights violations, environmental protection, sustainable development, and trade. Following this surge, the twenty-first century opened with an abundance of international law but a dearth of international institutions for monitoring or implementing it. Thus compliance has become a major challenge of the early new millennium, and this volume addresses compliance issues from the most general and theoretical to the specifics of key case studies. From around the globe, the distinguished authors of these original essays tackle some of the most urgent challenges to international law today, ranging from child soldiers in Africa all the way up to American exceptionalism. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 53.
3. lappuse
... comply because the regime facilitates mutually beneficial cooperation among its members . Alterna- tively , Ikenberry suggests that secondary states may comply because they view the regime as a legitimate compromise in which the lead ...
... comply because the regime facilitates mutually beneficial cooperation among its members . Alterna- tively , Ikenberry suggests that secondary states may comply because they view the regime as a legitimate compromise in which the lead ...
5. lappuse
... comply , acquiescence in the procedures that resolve disputes about the practical meaning of the rules , laws , or norms in question . " 25 The authors , therefore , assess whether actors are actually obeying the rules set out by ...
... comply , acquiescence in the procedures that resolve disputes about the practical meaning of the rules , laws , or norms in question . " 25 The authors , therefore , assess whether actors are actually obeying the rules set out by ...
7. lappuse
... comply with ? That is , has the end of Cold War deadlock produced an overload of newly negotiable regimes , with the newer regimes demonstrating less effectiveness than their predecessors ? Or is the apparent proliferation of new norms ...
... comply with ? That is , has the end of Cold War deadlock produced an overload of newly negotiable regimes , with the newer regimes demonstrating less effectiveness than their predecessors ? Or is the apparent proliferation of new norms ...
14. lappuse
... comply with its norms . Herbst concludes that international law must be significantly amended be- fore compliance gaps can be narrowed . First , despite the resistance of some states , the international community should develop ( and ...
... comply with its norms . Herbst concludes that international law must be significantly amended be- fore compliance gaps can be narrowed . First , despite the resistance of some states , the international community should develop ( and ...
16. lappuse
... comply with international norms and when they enforce those norms on weaker states they are engaging in bilateral coercion rather than relying on multilateral mechanisms . International compliance mechanisms are most devel- oped in the ...
... comply with international norms and when they enforce those norms on weaker states they are engaging in bilateral coercion rather than relying on multilateral mechanisms . International compliance mechanisms are most devel- oped in the ...
Saturs
Conceptual Issues Surrounding the Compliance Gap | 19 |
The Institutional Dilemmas of Market Integration Compliance and International Regimes for Trade and Finance | 41 |
South Korea and International Compliance Behavior The WTO and IMF in Comparative Perspective | 61 |
Compliance with Multilateral Environmental Agreements The Climate Change Regime | 93 |
Crises and Conflicts in the African Great Lakes Region The Problem of Noncompliance with Humanitarian Law | 121 |
Compliance with the Laws of War The Role of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda | 153 |
International Laws of War and the African Child Norms Compliance and Sovereignty | 185 |
Dilemmas of Compliance with Arms Control and Disarmament Agreements | 205 |
The American Problem The United States and Noncompliance in the World of Arms Control and Nonproliferation | 247 |
Gaps Commitments and the Compliance Challenge | 303 |
331 | |
About the Contributors | 345 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
International Law and Organization: Closing the Compliance Gap Michael W. Doyle,Edward C. Luck Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2004 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Africa agreements areas argued armed conflict arms control Article chaebols Chayes commitment compliance behavior compliance gap comply Congo Convention countries Court crimes crisis CTBT disarmament domestic economic effective efforts enforcement ensure environmental established Feiveson force genocide global human rights Human Rights Watch IAEA ICTR implementation institutions interests international community international humanitarian law international law international norms international organizations international regimes Iraq Iraq's Israel issues justice Kyoto Protocol Lakes Region liberalization mass destruction MEAS mechanisms military Missile monitoring multilateral negotiations NGOs noncompliance nonproliferation nonstate actors North Korea nuclear weapons obligations parties peace percent political problems procedures proliferation rebel groups reform Report responsibility rice role rules Rwanda sanctions sector Security Council resolution South sovereignty strategy ternational tion tional trade transnational treaty U.N. Security Council Uganda United Nations University Press UNSCOM violations weapons of mass World York
Atsauces uz šo grāmatu
International Peacekeeping (2004): The Yearbook of International Peace ... Harvey Langholtz,Boris Kondoch,Alan Wells Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2005 |