| Tim Hillier - 1998 - 920 lapas
...have already been adopted by the parties. 3 In making recommendations under this article the Security and to the members of the national groups appointed...persons in position to accept the duties of a member Article 37 1 Should the parties to a dispute of the nature referred to in Article 33 fail to settle... | |
| Jochen A. Frowein, Rüdiger Wolfrum - 1999 - 566 lapas
...court" without a DSB ruling. While the UN Security Council has rarely complied with its obligation to "take into consideration that legal disputes should...the parties to the International Court of Justice" (Article 36 para. 3 UN-Charter), the WTO Appellate Body has effectively become the "principal judicial... | |
| Christopher C. Joyner - 1997 - 510 lapas
...the Charter to recommend appropriate procedures for settling such disputes31 - while bearing in mind that "legal disputes should as a general rule be referred by the parties to the International Court of Justice."32 The Council's authority to recommend terms of settlement is normally limited to situations... | |
| Bardo Fassbender - 1998 - 444 lapas
...judges. It is also true that according to Article 36, paragraph 3 of the Charter legal disputes shall 'as a general rule be referred by the parties to the International Court of Justice'. However, in the scheme of the Charter, which does not provide for a strict separation of powers, the... | |
| Eric Suy, Karel Wellens - 1998 - 852 lapas
...24, UN Charter) in no way affects the principle that, as the UN Charter puts it in Article 36(3), 680 "legal disputes should as a general rule be referred by the parties to the ICJ in accordance with the provisions of the Statute of the Court". Consequently, the ICJ has repeatedly... | |
| J. G. Merrills - 1998 - 388 lapas
...of the Charter lays down that in making recommendations for settlement the Security Council should take into consideration that legal disputes should 'as a general rule' be referred to the International Court of Justice. However, neither the Council nor the Assembly can really be... | |
| Lucius Conrad Caflisch - 1998 - 166 lapas
...International Court of Justice (ICJ), the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, to which legal disputes should, as a general rule, be referred by the parties. 4 An example of a more recently established organism with a similarly wide competence but confined... | |
| Gambhir Bhatta - 2000 - 372 lapas
...already been adopted by the parties. (3) In making recommendations under this Article the Security Council should also take into consideration that legal...accordance with the provisions of the Statute of the Court. Comment: In a number of Council resolutions based on this Article, the Council has asked other organs... | |
| Chi Young Pak - 2000 - 264 lapas
...already been adopted by the parties. (3) In making recommendations under this Article the Security Council should also take into consideration that legal disputes should as a general rule be referred to the International Court of Justice in accordance with the provisions of the Statute of the Court.... | |
| Fons Coomans - 2000 - 528 lapas
...(Article 24, UN Charter) in no way affects the principle that, as the UN Charter puts it in Article 36(3), "legal disputes should as a general rule be referred by the parties to the ICJ in accordance with the provisions of the Statute of the Court". Consequently, the ICJ has repeatedly... | |
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