German Yearbook of International Law / Jahrbuch für Internationales Recht

Vol. 53 (2010)

2011. 1045 S.
Available as
179,90 €
ISBN 978-3-428-13622-3
available
179,90 €
ISBN 978-3-428-53622-1
available
Price for libraries: 270,00 € [?]
224,90 €
ISBN 978-3-428-83622-2
available
Price for libraries: 329,00 € [?]

Description

The German Yearbook of International Law, founded as the Jahrbuch für Internationales Recht, provides an annual report on new developments in international law and is edited by the Walther Schücking Institute for International Law at the University of Kiel. Since its inception in 1948, the Yearbook has endeavored to make a significant academic contribution to the ongoing development of international law. Over many decades the Yearbook has moved beyond its origins as a forum for German scholars to publish their research and has become a highly-regarded international forum for innovative scholarship in international law. In 1976, the Yearbook adopted its current title and began to publish contributions written in English in order to reach the largest possible international audience. This editorial decision has enabled the Yearbook to successfully overcome traditional language barriers and inform an international readership about current research in German academic institutions and, at the same time, to present international viewpoints to its German audience. Fully aware of the paramount importance of international practice, the Yearbook publishes contributions from active practitioners of international law on a regular basis. The Yearbook also includes critical comments on German state practice relating to international and EU law, as well as international reactions to that practice.

Overview

Inhalt: Forum: Perspectives on International Law from China: B. B. Jia, A Synthesis of the Notion of Sovereignty and the Ideal of the Rule of Law: Reflections on the Contemporary Chinese Approach to International Law - Focus: Climate Change and new Challenges for International Law: A. Proelss, International Environmental Law and the Challenge of Climate Change - M. Fitzmaurice, Responsibility and Climate Change - P. Aerni / B. Boie / T. Cottier / K. Holzer / D. Jost / B. Karapinar / S. Matteotti / O. Nartova / T. Payosova / L. Rubini / A. Shingal / F. Temmerman / E. Xoplaki / S. Z. Bigdeli, Climate Change and International Law: Exploring the Linkages between Human Rights, Environment, Trade and Investment - C. Schofield, Rising Waters, Shrinking States: The Potential Impacts of Sea Level Rise on Claims to Maritime Jurisdiction - J. McAdam / B. Saul, Displacement with Dignity: International Law and Policy Responses to Climate Change Migration and Security in Bangladesh - M. Bowman, Conserving Biological Diversity in an Era of Climate Change: Local Implementation of International Wildlife Treaties - J. Gupta, Climate Change: A GAP Analysis Based on Third World Approaches to International Law - W. Th. Douma, Legal Aspects of the European Union's Biofuels Policy: Protection or Protectionism? - General Articles: Foreword from the Editors: G. Handl, In Re South African Apartheid Litigation and Beyond: Corporate Liability for Aiding and Abetting Under the Alien Tort Statute - K. Ambos, The Crime of Aggression after Kampala - K. Odendahl, The Scope of Application of the Principle of Territorial Integrity - C. Riziki Majinge, Southern Sudan and the Struggle for Self-Determination in Contemporary Africa: Examining its Basis Under International Law - A. Gourgourinis, Lex Specialis in WTO and Investment Protection Law - A. Peters, Extraterritorial Naturalizations: Between the Human Right to Nationality, State Sovereignty and Fair Principles of Jurisdiction - P. Pustorino, Failed States and International Law: The Impact of UN Practice on Somalia in Respect of Fundamental Rules of International Law - P. Kroker, Transitional Justice Policy in Practice: Victim Participation in the Khmer Rouge Tribunal - K. Oellers-Frahm, Problematic Question or Problematic Answer? Observations on the International Court of Justice's Advisory Opinion Concerning Kosovo's Unilateral Declaration of Independence - German Practice: W. Heintschel von Heinegg / P. Dreist, The 2009 Kunduz Air Attack: The Decision of the Federal Prosecutor-General on the Dismissal of Criminal Proceedings Against Members of the German Armed Forces - T. Giegerich, The Federal Constitutional Court's Non-Sustainable Role as Europe's Ultimate Arbiter: From Age Discrimination to the Saving of the Euro - T. Giegerich / O. Daum, Chechen Rebels as "Bona Fide Refugees"? The Judgment of the Federal Administrative Court of 24 November 2009 - D. Blöcher, Retraction of Definitive Administrative Acts after a Change in Case Law - P. Wennholz, Refugee Protection for a Leading War Criminal? The Judgment of the Munich Higher Administrative Court of 11 January 2010 - H. Wieduwilt, The German Federal Constitutional Court Puts the Data Retention Directive on Hold - A. Proelss, Enforcement of the Obligation to Refer to the European Court of Justice Under Article 267 (3) TFEU - M. Krivickaite / H.-C. Schröder, The New German Federal Nature Conservation Act in the Context of the International Law of the Sea - B. Schriewer, Gäfgen v. Germany Revisited - W. Staff, Germany's National Preventive Mechanism Under the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention Against Torture - T. Thienel, Human Rights of Biological Fathers v. Hard and Fast Rules: The Case of Anayo v. Germany - J. Siegfried / B. Schriewer / P. Braasch, The Withdrawal of Germany's Unilateral Statement on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child - P. Braasch, Deportation of Foreign Nationals Under Article 12 (4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights - F. Bieker / L. Frahm, Follow-Up: The Implementation of the ECtHR's Judgment in the Case M. v. Germany - A. Makee Mosa / F. Seesko, Can the 2008 Framework Decision on the Fight against Organized Crime Influence German Criminal Law? - P. Zickert, German Legal Protection Against the European Patent Organisation and Other International Organizations - O. Daum, Follow-Up: The Zaunegger v. Germany Case - P. Braasch, Follow-Up: The European Court of Human Rights' Pilot Judgment on Excessive Length of Proceedings Before German Courts - Book Reviews - Books Received

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