"International law" Essays and Research Papers

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    International Trade Law

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    INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION (1) In an international commercial arbitration‚ parties usually involve a third party‚ i.e. someone who is neutral‚ (arbitrator) and the neutral party is entrusted with the responsibility of resolving the dispute. The authority of the arbitrator is derived not from a court system‚ but from the consent of the parties as stipulated in their contract‚ or mutual agreement. It is imperative to note here that the court can enforce the decision or ruling of the arbitrator

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    PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Principles treated as norms that are binding for all members of international organizations. The principles are divided into general and special. General are principles that embody the most common norms of behavior of subjects and cover a wide range of international relations. General principles are based on natural laws of behavior‚ which consisted of public relations for centuries. The general principles include: o the principle of peaceful

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    International Law Notes

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    International Law Reading Notes: Ch. 3: Sources * There is no single body to create laws internationally binding upon everyone nor a proper system of courts with comprehensive and compulsory jurisdiction to interpret and extend the law. * Sources: provisions operating within the legal system on a technical level * Reason and morality are excluded as well as functional sources * Survey of process whereby rules of international law emerge * Article 38 of the Statute of

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    1. What are the sources of international law? Sources of international law help us understand what constitutes international law‚ and how international law is created. It refers to where states‚ organizations‚ individuals and the courts can finds principles of international law. Sources of international law can be divided into two main types‚ which are the primary sources and the subsidiary sources. The article 38 of the statute of the international court of justice establishes the five main sources

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    History of International Law

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    I. introduction No area of international law has been so little explored by scholars as the history of the subject. is is a remarkable state of a# airs‚ probably without parallel in any other academic discipline (including other branches of law). Although this intellectual scandal (as it well deserves to be called) is now being remedied‚ we are still only in the earliest stages of the serious study of international legal history. Many blank spots exist‚ some of which will be identi‚ ed in

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    tNATIONAL LAW SCHOOL OF INDIA UNIVERSITY‚ BENGALURU IV Year XI Trimester B.A.‚ LL.B. (Hons.) Degree Programme – (October – January) 2011-12 ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - Project Topics ID No 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 Student Name Mr. Abhishek Subbaiah Mr. Aditya Kumar Ms. Akanksha Sharma Mr. Akshay Sharma Ms. Akshaya R Mr. Amlan Mohanty Ms. Anjali Anchayil Ms. Anupama Kumar Mr. Aruj Garg Mr. Arun B Mattamana Ms. Ashwini O. Ms. Ashwita Ambast Mr. Badrinarayanan

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    Nature and scope of private international law Private international law is a set of procedural rules which determines which legal system‚ law of’ which jurisdiction‚ applies when legal dispute has a "foreign element"‚ such as contract agreed by parties located in different countries. It is a branch of English law known as the ’conflict of laws’. By a foreign element is meant simply a contact with some system of law other than English law‚ it has three main objects: Firstly‚ to prescribe the conditions

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    THE NATURE‚ HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW 1. Introduction International law is divided into: a) Private International Law (or the conflict of laws) and b) Public International Law. The former deals with those cases‚ within particular legal systems‚ in which foreign elements obtrude‚ raising issues as to the application of foreign law or the role of foreign courts. Public International Law is not simply an adjunct of a legal order‚ but a separate system

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    NOTES ON PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW by PORFERIO JR. and MELFA SALIDAGA NOTES ON PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW CHAPTER 1 GENERAL PRINCIPLES Nature and Scope Public International Law – It is the body of rules and principles that are recognized as legally binding and which govern the relations of states and other entities invested with international legal personality. Formerly known as “law of nations” coined by Jeremy Bentham in 1789. Three Major Parts of Public International Law 1. Laws of Peace – normal

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    Feminist Approaches to International Law Feminist approaches to International Law and its underlying issues can be seen as radical‚ liberal‚ and extreme. The male point of view has found a way of forcing itself upon the world‚ apprehending it and dominating it full-fledged. It has grasped hold of the State and law in the same way male dominance has grasped women throughout history. Whether the clasps of violence against women are through rape‚ forced marriage‚ exploitation and forced prostitution

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