Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law
Search
Your search for 'tei_propername:"International regime"' returned 3 results. Modify search
Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
The Quest for World Order and Human Dignity in the Twenty-first Century: Constitutive Process and Individual Commitment General Course on Public International Law (Volume 351)
(129,304 words)
Michael Reisman, W.
Keywords: International law | International regime | Development of international law | Decision-making | Sovereignty | Human rights | Subjects of international law | Individuals | Use of force |
Mots clefs: Droit international | Régime international | Développement du droit international | Prise de décisions | Souveraineté | Droits de l'homme | Sujets du droit international | Individus | Force | ABSTRACT The point of these lectures, given in 2012, is to elaborate a framework to understand the place of practitioners, and others affected by …
The Evolving International Regime of Nuclear Non-Proliferation (Volume 321)
(66,292 words)
Ibrahim Shaker, Mohamed
Keywords: Nuclear weapons | Proliferation | Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (London, Moscow, Washington, D.C., 1 July 1968) | Disarmament | Nuclear tests | Nuclear energy | International regime |
Mots clefs: Armes atomiques | Prolifération | Traité sur la non-prolifération des armes nucléaires (1968) | Désarmement | Essais nucléaires | Energie nucléaire | Régime international | ABSTRACT Mohamed Ibrahim Shaker, Vice-President of the Egyptian Council for Foreign Affairs, reports in this article on Evolving Internatio…
The Régime of Boundary Waters — the Canadian-United States Experience (Volume 146)
(40,471 words)
Cohen, Maxwell
Keywords: Canada | United States of America | Great Lakes | Boundary wateInternational watercourses | Water | Shared natural resources | International regime |
Mots clefs: Canada | Etats-Unis d’Amérique | Cours d eau frontières | Lacs (Grands) | ABSTRACT Maxwell Cohen, Professor at Mc Gill University, notes that the importance of study of international rivers in public international law comes from the geophysical reality that rivers impose on peoples, and artificial political divisions that cut off rivers or create divisi…
