"This fully-updated third edition provides a comprehensive survey of public international law, with useful references throughout to current events, classic and contemporary cases and scholarship. It is designed as a stand-alone text or as a complement to all the major casebooks on the topic. The first part of the book addresses how international law is created, interpreted and enforced; the second part focuses on the interface of international law and national law; and the final part covers key subject matter areas: human rights, injury to aliens, the law of the sea, international environmental law, international criminal law, and the use of force."--publisher website.
The High Court decided, by 6:1, that native title did continue to exist in these circumstances. BRENNAN J [with whom Mason CJ and McHugh J agreed]: Although the question whether a territory has been acquired by the Crown is not ...
Borzu Sabahi, Nicholas J. Birch, Ian A. Laird, José Antonio Rivas. UNCITRAL working plan. And similarly there is a test that any new future subject of proposed work should satisfy. Universities, research institutions, and NGOs35 should ...
The Law Express series is designed to help you revise effectively. This book is your guide to understanding essential concepts, remembering and applying key legislation and making your answers stand out!
Ann . 41-2 et seq . , and a common law theory of interference with prospective contractual relations . Kirkpatrick moved to dismiss on , inter alia , grounds that the act of state doctrine barred adjudication .
Hall, . . . Hall's Chronicle, ed. 1809I Hemingburgh, . ed. English Historical Society, 1848. Kendall, . . E. A. Kendall. An Argument on Trial by Battle, 3rd ed. 1818. Knyghton, . . in Decern Scriptores, 1652. Madox, .
Public International Law
Comprehensively updated and expanded. Explains and illustrates the cardinal concepts of international law from an Australian perspective.
Foundations of International Law
International Law
The Making of Difference in International Law [microform]: Interpretation, Identity and Participation in the Discourse of Self-determination