Austrian review of international and European law.
[Book]
editor-in-chief, Gerhard Loibl ; executive editor, Stephan Wittich.
Vol. 8, 2003 /
Leiden :
Martinus Nijhoff,
2005.
1 online resource (x, 596 pages).
Austrian review of international and European law
Includes bibliographical references.
Agora: Is the Nature of the International Legal System Changing?; Introduction (Gerhard Loibl & Stephan Wittich); Is the Nature of the International Legal System Changing? (Karl Zemanek); What Does 'Change' Mean? International Law vs. the International Legal System (Sir Franklin Berman); No Need to Panic! Or: plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose (Michael Bothe); New Imperial Order or (Hegemonic) International Law? (Antonio Remiro Brotóns); After Austerlitz: The International System in the Age of Rampant American Unilateralism (Thomas M. Franck); Two Faces of Hegemony (Andrea Gattini)
Is the Nature of the International Legal System Changing?-A Response (Pemmaraju Sreenivasa Rao)Does US Hegemony Change the Nature of the International Legal System?- A Reply to Professor Zemanek (August Reinisch); Unilateral Action in an Imperfect World Order (W. Michael Reisman & Scott Shuchart); Is the Nature of the International Legal System Changing?-A Reply (Hélène Ruiz Fabri); Is the International Legal Order in Jeopardy? (Eric Suy); A New World Order Dominated by a Hegemon? (Christian Tomuschat); Keeping Pace with the Times? (Bakhtiyar Tuzmukhamedov)
Merely the Notion of Self-Defence is Changing (László Valki)Has the Nature of International Law Changed? Le Plus Ça Change... (Francisco Orrego Vicuña); Reflections on the Development of International Treaty Law under the Auspices of the United States Hegemony and Globalization (Rüdiger Wolfrum); What Has Been Changed of the International Legal System? (Xue Hanqin); Articles; We Hold These Truths to Be Self-evident, perhaps-Side-stepping the Commonality of 'Common Principles' and Fundamental Aims in EU Law (Thomas Jaeger)
Procurement Activities of International Organizations-An Attempt of a First Insight in Evolving Legal Principles (Bernd-Roland Killmann)Current Developments; Legal Reforms in Bosnia and Herzegovina versus Good Common Sense (Emanuelle Cerf); Recent Austrian Cases on Questions of Jurisdictional Immunities (Stephan Wittich); Documentation; Austrian Measure for Victims of National Socialism (Michael Schoiswohl); Austrian Practice in International Law (2001/ 2002)/ Österreichische Praxis zum Internationalen Recht (2001/2002); Structure; Book Reviews; William E. Butler, Russian Law (Ulrike Köhler)
The Empire(s) of International Law: System Change and Legal Transformation (Martti Koskenniemi)Is the Nature of the International Legal System Changing?-A Response (Vaughan Lowe); United States Unilateralism: Cause or Symptom? A Brief Response to Professor Zemanek (Donald McRae); The International Legal System: Is its Nature Changing? (Georg Nolte); Who Helps the Hegemon? (Mary Ellen O'Connell); Can International Law Survive US "Leadership"? (Alain Pellet); The Growth of International Law between Globalization and the Great Power (Anne Peters)
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The Review is an annual publication that provides a scholarly forum for the discussion of issues of public international and European law, with particular emphasis on topics of special interest for Austria.