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Contents
- Preliminary Material
- Main Text
- Introduction (2005)
- I General Principles and Sources of Law
- Division A: General Principles
- Ch.I: Good Faith and Related Principles
- Ch.II: International Rights and Obligations
- Ch.III: Relationships Between Legal Orders
- Division B: Sources Of Law
- Preliminary Material
- Ch.I: Miscellaneous Minor Sources or Pseudo-Sources
- I Considerations of humanity
- 2 Legal interests, legitimate interests, economic interests
- (1) The distinction between rights and interests: the Barcelona Traction case ]
- (2) Interests as the inspiration of a practice producing a customary right: the Fisheries Jurisdiction cases ]
- (3) Interests underlying the establishment of prescriptive or historic rights: the Tunisia/Libya case ]
- (4) Economic and other interests as ‘relevant circumstances’ for purposes of an equitable delimitation of maritime spaces ]
- (5) The special case of intervention under Article 62 of the Statute ]
- Ch.II: Treaties and Conventions in Force
- Ch.III: Custom
- Preliminary Material
- 1 The relationship of ‘general international law’ and customary law
- 2 The elements constitutive of custom
- 3 The influence of treaties on custom
- 4 General, special, and bilateral customary law
- 5. Customary law and the ‘persistent objector’ ]
- 6. Jus cogens and customary international law ]
- Ch.IV: General Principles of Law Recognized by Civilized Nations
- Preliminary Material
- 1.–2 Introduction: Nature and derivation of general principles of law
- 3 The process of analogy or ‘transfer’ of municipal principle
- 4 General principles in the hierarchy of sources
- 5. Eclipse of general principle by conflicting principle of international law: the North Sea Continental Shelf cases ]
- 6. The significance of the expression ‘civilized nations’: Philosophy of Judge Ammoun ]
- 7 . Renvoi to municipal law distinguished from application of general principles: the Barcelona Traction case ]
- 8 General principles in procedural law
- Ch.V: Subsidiary Sources: Judicial Decisions
- Ch.V-A: Legal Writing (Doctrine)
- Introduction (2006)
- Division A: General Principles
- II Treaty Interpretation and Other Treaty Points
- Preliminary Material
- Division A: Treaty Interpretation
- Preliminary Material
- Ch.I: Introductory
- Ch.II: Fitzmaurice’s Principles in the Case Law of the Court, 1954–1989
- Fitzmaurice’s Principles
- 1 Principle of Actuality (or Textuality)
- 2 Principle of Natural and Ordinary Meaning
- 3 Principle of Integration: The ‘Object and Purpose’ Criterion
- 4 Principle of Effectiveness
- 5 Principle of Subsequent Practice of the Parties
- 6 Principle of Contemporaneity
- Ch.III: Ancillary and Other Interpretative Findings
- Introduction (2007)
- Division B: Other Treaty Points
- Ch.I: Preliminary Matters
- Ch.II: Conditions of the Formation of Agreement
- Ch.III: The Treaty in Action
- Ch.IV: Conduct Inconsistent with a Treaty
- Ch.V: Termination of Treaties
- 1 Termination of Treaties Containing No Provision for Denunciation
- 2 Termination (or Suspension) of Treaties on Account of Material Breach
- 3 Termination on the Ground of Fundamental Change of Circumstances
- 3A Impossibility of Performance
- 4 Failure of Consideration as a Ground for Termination of Treaties?
- 5 Procedural Requirements on Termination of Treaty
- 6 Desuetude
- III Points of Substantive Law
- Division A: The Law Of The Sea
- Introduction
- Ch.I: Claims to Maritime Spaces: General Survey
- Preliminary Material
- 1 The Relationship of Territorial Sovereignty to Rights over Maritime Spaces: Bases of Title
- 2 The Relationship of Land Territory to Sea-bed Areas: ‘Natural Prolongation’ and Distance
- [3 The Relationship between the Principles Governing Title to the Rules for Delimitation of Maritime Spaces]
- [4 The Relationship of Maritime Delimitations inter se : Does an Objectively Correct Determination Exist for Each Case? ]
- Ch.II: Maritime Delimitation: Legal and Practical Aspects
- A Introduction
- B The Single Maritime Boundary
- C The Territorial Sea
- 1 The ‘Fundamental Norm’ Requiring Recourse to Equity
- (1) The demise of ‘subjective equity’
- (2) What is it that must be equitable?
- (3) Equidistance and after: the methods of attaining the equitable result
- Ch.III: Other Questions of the Law of the Sea
- Preface (2009)
- Division B: State Sovereignty, Territory And Frontiers
- Division C: State Responsibility And International Claims
- Ch.I: The ‘Act of the State’ Under International Law
- Ch.II: The Breach of an International Obligation
- 1 Inter-State Obligations
- 2 Obligations Erga Omnes
- 3 Relationship between State Responsibility and Municipal Law
- 3A Relationship between State Responsibility and International Criminal Law
- 4 Obligations of Means and Obligations of Result
- 5 The Impact of the State Act: The Relevance of Damage
- 6 The Time Element
- Ch.III: Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness
- Ch.IV: The Rule of Exhaustion of Local Remedies
- Ch.V: Reparation and Restitution
- Division D: International Organizations
- Introduction
- 1 The Legal Personality of International Organizations
- 2 Attributes of International Personality
- 3 Problems of Membership of an International Organization
- 4 Organs of the United Nations
- 5 Privileges and Immunities of International Organizations and their Staff
- 6 Regional Agencies (Article 52 of the UN Charter)
- Introduction
- Division A: The Law Of The Sea
- IV Questions of Jurisdiction and Competence
- Preliminary Material
- Ch.I: Jurisdiction in Contentious Cases
- 1 Preliminary Observations: Terminology and Related Matters
- 2 Preliminary, Incidental and Substantive Jurisdiction
- 3 The Sources of Jurisdiction
- 4 Jurisdiction and the Propriety of Exercising It
- 4A The Time Element: At What Moment Must Jurisdiction Exist?
- 5 Jurisdiction in Relation to the Decisions of Other Tribunals
- 6 Jurisdiction Inherited from the Permanent Court of International Justice
- 7 The Competénce de la Compétence
- 8 Relationship between Multiple Sources of Jurisdiction
- 9 The Extent of Jurisdiction
- 10 Jurisdiction under Article 36, Paragraph 2, of the Statute of the Court
- 11 Jurisdiction and Admissibility
- 12 Jurisdiction and Intervention
- Ch.II: Jurisdiction and Its Exercise in Advisory Proceedings
- V Questions of Procedure, 1990–2011
- Introduction (2011)
- Ch.I: The Composition of the Court for Particular Cases
- Ch.II: The Institution of Proceedings
- Ch.III: Incidental Proceedings
- Introduction
- 1 Provisional measures
- (1) Requirements for the indication of provisional measures
- (2) Measures to prevent escalation of a dispute
- (3) Indication of provisional measures proprio motu
- (4) The legal effect of provisional measures
- (5) Provisional measures in advisory proceedings?
- 2 Preliminary objections
- 3 Non Appearance
- 4 Counter-claims
- 5 Jurisdiction and its exercise in incidental proceedings
- 6 Intervention
- (1) Introduction
- (2) Intervention under Article 63 of the Statute
- (3) Intervention under Article 62 of the Statute
- (a) Introduction
- (b) What is intervention?
- (c) The relationship between Articles 59 and 62 of the Statute
- (d) The ‘interest of a legal nature’ and the object of an intervention
- (e) How is the interest of a legal nature to be ‘affected’?
- (f) Intervention at an interlocutory stage
- (g) The effect of intervention
- (h) The effect of a failed application to intervene
- (4) Some conclusions on intervention under Article 62
- (5) Information supplied by international organizations (Statute, Article 34)
- 7 Interpretation of judgments
- 8 Revision of Judgments
- 9 Discontinuance
- Further Material