Finnish yearbook of international law. Vol. 17 (2006)
Finnish yearbook of international law.
Law in General > Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence > Periodicals > By main entry > B
Edition Details
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): Netherlands
- Publication Information: Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff ; Biggleswade : Extenza Turpin [distributor], 2009
- Publication Type (Medium): Periodicals
- Type: Book
- Permalink: https://books.lawin.org/finnish-yearbook-of-international-law-vol-17-2006/ (Stable identifier)
Short Description
pages cm
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Finnish yearbook of international law. Vol. 17 (2006) is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Finnish yearbook of international law. Vol. 17 (2006) in Google Books
- Find Finnish yearbook of international law. Vol. 17 (2006) in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Responsable Person: editor-in-chief, Jan Klabbers ; executive editor, Katja Creutz.
- Publication Date: 2009
- Country/State: Netherlands
- Number of Editions: 2 editions
- First edition Date: 2009
- Last edition Date: 2009
- General Notes: Published in association with Ius Gentium Association, Finland.
- Languages: British English
- Library of Congress Code: K2
- Dewey Code: 341.05
- ISBN: 9789004171725 900417172X
- OCLC: 276227027
Main Contents
Symposium; Post-ILC Debate on Fragmentation of International Law; Foreword; Gabrielle Marceau, Fragmentation in International Law: The Relationship between WTO Law and General International Law – a Few Comments from a WTO Perspective; Isabelle Van Damme, Some Observations about the ILC Study Group Report on the Fragmentation of International Law: WTO Treaty Interpretation against the Background of Other International Law; Nele Matz-Luck, Harmonization, Systemic Integration, and ‘Mutual-Supportiveness’ as Conflict-Solution Techniques: Different Modes of Interpretation as a Challenge to Negative Effects of Fragmentation?; Xue Hanqin, Fragmented Law or Fragmented Order?; Christine Chinkin, Jus Cogens, Article 103 of the UN Charter and Other Hierarchical Techniques of Conflict Solution; Alain Pellet, Comments in Response to Christine Chinkin and in Defense of Jus Cogens as the Best Bastion against the Excesses of Fragmentation; Anne van Aaken, Fragmentation of International Law: The Case of International Investment Law; Mario Prost, All Shouting the Same Slogans: International Law’s Unities and the Politics of Fragmentation; Articles; Robert Bruckmann, Kindergarten? The Interaction between the German Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights; Leena Heinamaki, The Protection of the Environmental Integrity of Indigenous Peoples in Human Rights Law; Veijo Heiskanen, Architexture: An Outline of an Alternative Philosophy of Global Governance; Andre Nollkaemper, The Independence of the Domestic Judiciary in International Law; Thomas Skouteris, The New Tribunalism: Strategies of (De) Legitimation in the Era of International Adjudication; Book Reviews & Review Articles; David Kennedy, Of War and Law (Susan C. Breau); Marius Emberland, The Human Rights of Companies: Exploring the Structure of ECHR Protection (Jan Klabbers); Alexander Orakhelashvili, Peremptory Norms in International Law (Varro Vooglaid); New Finnish Doctoral Dissertations in International Law; Lotta Viikari, (lectio praecursoria, 13 June 2007): The Environmental Element in Space Law: Assessing the Present and Charting the Future; Statement by Armel Kerrest; Kamrul Hossain (lectio praecursoria, 11 June 2007), Limits to Power? Legal and Institutional Control over the Competence of the United Nations Security Council under Chapter VII of the Charter; Statement by Thilo Marauhn; Recent Developments and State Practice; Juha Rainne, Elements of Finnish State Practice in 2005-2006, with Particular Reference to Finland’s Presidency of the European Union; Ius Gentium Association
Summary Note
With attention to developments that affect Finland, this title offers: articles of a theoretical nature; fresh avenues and approaches; shorter polemics; commentaries on the international law developments; book reviews; and, documentation of relevance to Finland’s foreign relations. ”’