The International Court of Justice and the Western Tradition of International Law: The Paul Martin Lectures in International Relations and Law |
Contents
The Challenge to Classical International Law | 1 |
b The objection of Colonialism | 8 |
Nature and Definition of International | 20 |
iv Trend and directions in the definition of | 31 |
The Emerging Constitutionalism of World | 55 |
elections of judges | 73 |
e Western retreat from the Court | 83 |
f Third World discovery of the Court | 93 |
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Common terms and phrases
Advisory Opinion application approach Article Big Power veto claims competing Compulsory Jurisdiction concept contemporary International Court majority Court of Justice Court Statute Customary International Law decision decolonisation Department text dispute Dissenting Opinion earlier El Salvador elections Gulf of Maine historical I.C.J. Reports Ibid institutions intellectual international adjudication International Court international law-making involving Judge Lachs Judge Oda Judge Schwebel Judgment Judicial Law-Making judicial majority judicial self-restraint Jurisdiction and Admissibility jurists legal positivism legal principles legal systems ment Merits Military and Paramilitary multilateral treaty Namibia Nicaragua non-use of force norms Paramilitary Activities particular parties Paul Martin policy-making political post-War present President relations Resolution rĂ´le rules Salvador seat Second Phase Security Council South West Africa Special Chamber substantive territorial tion tional Law tribunal U.N. Charter U.N. General Assembly U.S. constitutional U.S. Government U.S. Government's U.S. national judge U.S. Supreme Court United Nations Charter vote Western European World Community World Court