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Full-Text Articles in Law
“Unwilling Or Unable”, Lucy V. Jordan
“Unwilling Or Unable”, Lucy V. Jordan
International Law Studies
Critics of the unwilling or unable doctrine suggest that it could undermine the United Nations collective security system and argue that it requires an unacceptable ceding of a State’s territorial sovereignty. Increased reliance on the doctrine following the terrorist attacks of 9/11, particularly in relation to the use of force against ISIL in Syria since 2014, has caused the doctrine to face significant scrutiny. The purpose of this article is to ascertain whether the unwilling or unable doctrine has reached customary international law status. If found to be the case, the doctrine would confirm the right of States to act …
Israel’S Perspective On Key Legal And Practical Issues Concerning The Application Of International Law To Cyber Operations, Roy Schöndorf
Israel’S Perspective On Key Legal And Practical Issues Concerning The Application Of International Law To Cyber Operations, Roy Schöndorf
International Law Studies
The speech given by the Israeli Deputy Attorney General (International Law) at the Naval War College’s event on “Disruptive Technologies and International Law” sets out, for the first time, Israel’s position on the application of international law to cyber operations. Consistent with the position taken by the vast majority of States thus far, Israel considers that international law applies to such operations. The speech stresses that questions pertaining to the identification and application of relevant legal rules remain, given the profound differences between the cyber domain and traditional domains of warfare—land, sea, and air. Therefore, in Israel’s view, a cautious …
Armed Conflicts In Outer Space: Which Law Applies?, Frans G. Von Der Dunk
Armed Conflicts In Outer Space: Which Law Applies?, Frans G. Von Der Dunk
International Law Studies
So far, outer space has merely become involved in terrestrial armed conflicts as part of the supportive infrastructure for military activities. Unfortunately, the risk that this changes is considerably growing, and it can no longer be excluded that (armed) force will become used in outer space, either directed towards Earth or within outer space itself.
This raises serious issues in the legal context, where space law so far has been premised on the hope that armed conflicts in outer space could be avoided whereas the law of armed conflict was not required so far to deal with the use of …
Indeterminacy In The Law Of Armed Conflict, Adil Ahmad Haque
Indeterminacy In The Law Of Armed Conflict, Adil Ahmad Haque
International Law Studies
Controversy and confusion pervade the law of armed conflict. Its most basic rules may seem ambiguous, vague, incomplete, or inconsistent. The prevailing view of customary international law confronts serious problems, in principle and in practice, when applied to the customary law of armed conflict. Legal indeterminacy, in its different forms, might be reduced or resolved in light of the object and purpose of the law of armed conflict, or by taking into account other relevant rules of international law. Unfortunately, the purpose of the law of armed conflict is itself the subject of deep disagreement. So is the relationship between …
Weapons Review Obligation Under Customary International Law, Natalia Jevglevskaja
Weapons Review Obligation Under Customary International Law, Natalia Jevglevskaja
International Law Studies
Under Article 36 of the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, States are required to review new weapons for their compliance with international law. While recent discussions on the regulation of lethal autonomous weapons systems under the auspices of the UN Certain Conventional Weapons Convention increasingly emphasize the importance of national weapons review mechanisms, Article 36 is known to be implemented only by a handful of States. Some legal scholars have nonetheless argued that the Article 36 obligation has attained customary international law status. Remarkably, substantive analysis of State practice and opinio juris required to evidence that certain …
1907 Hague Convention Viii Relative To The Laying Of Automatic Submarine Contact Mines, Steven Haines
1907 Hague Convention Viii Relative To The Laying Of Automatic Submarine Contact Mines, Steven Haines
International Law Studies
This article places 1907 Hague Convention VIII in its historical context, examines its content, summarizes State practice since 1907 (including during the two World Wars) and discusses the Convention’s relevance to contemporary mine warfare. The Convention has inherent shortcomings, has never been strictly applicable in any war since 1907, and is not strictly relevant to anything other than automatic contact mines (effectively excluding modern influence mines). Despite this—and a paucity of substantial State practice since 1945—the conclusion is that the Convention has influenced the customary law on sea-mines. When that custom was combined with other relevant custom (particularly that pertaining …
Maritime War Zones & Exclusion Zones, L.F.E. Goldie
Maritime War Zones & Exclusion Zones, L.F.E. Goldie
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
Forcible Self-Help In International Law, James J. Mchugh
Forcible Self-Help In International Law, James J. Mchugh
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
The Position Of Individuals In International Law, Herbert W. Briggs
The Position Of Individuals In International Law, Herbert W. Briggs
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
Acknowledgments And Introduction: Use Of Force, Human Rights, And General International Legal Issues
Acknowledgments And Introduction: Use Of Force, Human Rights, And General International Legal Issues
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
1907 Hague Convention V Respecting The Rights And Duties Of Neutral Powers And Persons In Case Of War On Land (18 October 1907), Howard S. Levie
1907 Hague Convention V Respecting The Rights And Duties Of Neutral Powers And Persons In Case Of War On Land (18 October 1907), Howard S. Levie
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
1907 Hague Convention Xi Relative To Certain Restrictions With Regard To The Exercise Of The Right Of Capture In Naval War (18 October 1907), Howard S. Levie
1907 Hague Convention Xi Relative To Certain Restrictions With Regard To The Exercise Of The Right Of Capture In Naval War (18 October 1907), Howard S. Levie
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.
Chapter Vii Termination Of Captivity, Howard S. Levie
Chapter Vii Termination Of Captivity, Howard S. Levie
International Law Studies
No abstract provided.