The UN Security Council's transition to 'targeted sanctions' in the 1990s marked a revolutionary shift in the locus of the Council's decision-making from states to individuals. The establishment of the targeted sanctions regime, should be regarded as more than a shift in policy and invites attention to an emerging tier of international governance. This book examines the need to develop a due process framework having regard to the uniquely political and crisis-based context in which the Security Council operates. Drawing on Anglo-American jurisprudence, this book develops procedural principles for the international institutional context using a value-based approach as an alternative to the formalistic approach taken in the literature to date. In doing so, it is recognized that due process is more than a set of discrete legal standards, but is a touchstone for the way the international legal order conceives of far larger questions about community, law and values.
Litigants in Person in Northern Ireland: Barriers to Legal Participation. Full report
Natural Justice: Principle and Practice
The Due Process of Law
Two central themes run through this book.
1972 reprint of 1944 edition.
Rechtliches Gehör und (persönlich-) mündliche Anhörung in familienrechtlichen Angelegenheiten und im Freiheitsentziehungsverfahren der freiwilligen Gerichtsbarkeit
This bumper collection of true crime is bargain-priced two-books-in-one value. ROUGH JUSTICE examines the question at the heart of our criminal justice syste: what happens when our courts get it wrong?
Against this backdrop, this book seeks new approaches to the requirement for open justice in times of change, and revisits the place and role of courts in ensuring open justice in democratic societies.
Retroactive and Retrospective Legislation and the Rule of Law