| عنوان : |
International agreements between non-state actors as a source of international law |
| نوع الوثيقة : |
نص مطبوع |
| مؤلفين : |
Loja, Melissa H, مؤلف |
| ناشر : |
Oxford : Hart |
| تاريخ النشر : |
2022 |
| عدد الصفحات : |
230.p |
| الأبعاد : |
24.cm |
| ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
978-1-5099-5110-9 |
| ثمن : |
12600.DA |
| اللغة : |
عربي (ara) |
| الكلمة المفتاح : |
300-sciences socieles 300-sciences socieles 300-sciences socieles Droit international, Sources, Acteurs non étatiques, Interprétation, Entreprises multinationales, |
| تكشيف : |
341 القانون الدولي |
| خلاصة : |
"This book examines whether international agreements between non-state actors can be identified as a source of international law using objective criteria. It asks whether, beyond Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, there is a system of rules, processes, beliefs or semantics by which these agreements can be objectively identified as a source of international law. Departing from the more usual state-centric analysis, it adopts postmodern legal positivism as its analytical tool. This allows for the reality that international law-making takes place in subjective social landscapes. To test the effectiveness of this approach, it is applied to agreements between petroleum agencies and corporations which allow two or more states to exploit disputed resources across boundaries looking in particular at arrangements involving China, Vietnam and the Philippines. By so doing it illustrates an alternative way that states." |
International agreements between non-state actors as a source of international law [نص مطبوع ] / Loja, Melissa H, مؤلف . - Oxford : Hart, 2022 . - 230.p ; 24.cm. ISBN : 978-1-5099-5110-9 : 12600.DA اللغة : عربي ( ara)
| الكلمة المفتاح : |
300-sciences socieles 300-sciences socieles 300-sciences socieles Droit international, Sources, Acteurs non étatiques, Interprétation, Entreprises multinationales, |
| تكشيف : |
341 القانون الدولي |
| خلاصة : |
"This book examines whether international agreements between non-state actors can be identified as a source of international law using objective criteria. It asks whether, beyond Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, there is a system of rules, processes, beliefs or semantics by which these agreements can be objectively identified as a source of international law. Departing from the more usual state-centric analysis, it adopts postmodern legal positivism as its analytical tool. This allows for the reality that international law-making takes place in subjective social landscapes. To test the effectiveness of this approach, it is applied to agreements between petroleum agencies and corporations which allow two or more states to exploit disputed resources across boundaries looking in particular at arrangements involving China, Vietnam and the Philippines. By so doing it illustrates an alternative way that states." |
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