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Full-Text Articles in Law

Interpreting Intervention, Craig Scott Oct 2015

Interpreting Intervention, Craig Scott

Craig M. Scott

The present article, written in May 2001, discusses the significance for the doctrine of humanitarian intervention of the normative signaling practices that transpired throughout the 1990s with respect to the use of military force outside of explicit authorization by UN Security Council resolutions. The first part of the article analyses the sociological and legal-theoretical dimensions of the relationship between interpretation of Security Council resolutions and the interpretive evolution of the UN Charter. Iraq and Kosovo then provide the focus for contextualizing the analysis. The article ends with an account of the interplay of the powers of the General Assembly and …


A Memorial For Bosnia: Framework Of Legal Arguments Concerning The Lawfulness Of The Maintenance Of The United Nations Security Council Arms Embargo On Bosnia And Herzegovina, Craig M. Scott, Francis Chang, Peter Copeland, Jasminka Kalajdzic Oct 2015

A Memorial For Bosnia: Framework Of Legal Arguments Concerning The Lawfulness Of The Maintenance Of The United Nations Security Council Arms Embargo On Bosnia And Herzegovina, Craig M. Scott, Francis Chang, Peter Copeland, Jasminka Kalajdzic

Craig M. Scott

No abstract provided.


International Criminal Law And The Inner Morality Of Law, Larry May, Margaret Martin, Craig Scott Oct 2015

International Criminal Law And The Inner Morality Of Law, Larry May, Margaret Martin, Craig Scott

Craig M. Scott

Larry May, W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy and Professor Law Vanderbilt University, investigates what Fuller called “procedural natural law” in contemporary international criminal law.

Respondent: Margaret Martin, University of Western Ontario