Bibliography

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bibliography BIBLIOGRAPHY BOOKS and ARTICLES in the FIELD of the PREVENTION and PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT of DISPUTES Compiled by Raymond Ridderhof exclusively from materials available in the Peace Palace Library 1. BOOKS Chiara, R., Military cultures in peace and stability operations: Afghanistan and Lebanon (2018). ISBN 9780812250183, 195 pp. Hynek, N., Ditrych, O. and Stritecky, V. (eds.), Regulating Global Security: Insights from Conventional and Unconventional Regimes (2019). ISBN 9783319985992, xv, 314 pp. Lehti, M., The era of private peacemakers: a new dialogic approach to mediation (2019). ISBN 9783319912004, xv, 263 pp. Lu, J., On state secession from international law perspectives (2018). ISBN 9783319974484, ix, 296 pp. Lysén, G., Rights to territory: the case of the United Nations: the matters of disposition, administration and possession (2018). ISBN 9789176789445, 227 pp. Mahapatra, D.A., Conflict management in Kashmir: state-people relations and peace (2018). ISBN 9781108423892, x, 175 pp. Milton, P., Axworthy, M. and Simms, B., Towards a Westphalia for the Middle East (2018). ISBN 9781787380233, xix, 160 pp. Paige, T.P., Petulant and contrary: approaches by the permanent five members of the UN Security Council to the concept of 'threat to the peace' under Article 39 of the UN Charter (2019). ISBN 9789004391390, ix, 330 pp. Pospisil, J., Peace in political unsettlement: beyond solving conflict (2018). ISBN 9783030043186, xvi, 240 pp. Rollfs, L., Angriff auf Friedensmissionen: eine Untersuchung des völkerstrafrechtlichen Tatbestands (2018). ISBN 9783848750788, 361 pp. Williams, P.D., Fighting for peace in Somalia: a history and analysis of the African Union Mission (AMISOM), 2007-2017 (2018). ISBN 9780198724544, xv, 366 pp. 2. CHAPTERS IN EDITED VOLUMES AND JOURNAL ARTICLES Balkenende, J.P., ‘De Europese Unie: van crisismanagement naar een duurzaam toekomstperspectief’, in Ettekoven van, B.J. en Donner, P.H. (eds.), Rechtsorde en bestuur: liber amicorum aangeboden aan Piet Hein Donner (2018) 429-443 Bellais, R., ‘Le rôle indispensable de l'Union européenne comme acteur de la stabilité internationale’, Revue défense nationale (2019), No. 821, 30-36 Bellamy, A.J. and McLoughlin, S., ‘Human Protection and the Politics of Armed Intervention: With Responsibility Comes Accountability’, Global responsibility to protect, 11 (2019) 333-361 Brown, D., ‘Measuring first use of force: methods, results, and implications’, Journal on the use of force and international law, 6 (2019) 83-112 Brzoska, M., Heller, R., Kahl, M. and Kreikemeyer, A., ‘Das liberale Paradigma auf dem Prüfstand: Friedensforschung und Sicherheitspolitik an den Bruchstellen der Globalisierung’, S+F: Vierteljahreszeitschrift für Sicherheit und Frieden, 37 (2019) 53-61 Buys, E. and Garwood-Gowers, A., ‘The ( Ir)Relevance of Human Suffering: Humanitarian Intervention and Saudi Arabia’s Operation Decisive Storm in Yemen’, Journal of conflict & security law, 24 (2019) 1-33 Chaeva, N., ‘La Russie et la crise syrienne’, Revue générale de droit international public, 123 (2019) 203-216. Clarke, K.M., ‘Peace and 'justice' sequencing in management of violence in the Malabo Protocol for the African Court’, in Jalloh, C.C., Clarke, K.M. and Nmehielle, V.O. (eds.), The African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples' Rights in context: development and challenges (2019) 109-146 Fodchenko, I., ‘Legal Aspects of the Russian–Norwegian Model for Cross-Border Unitization in the Barents Sea and Arctic Ocean’, Ocean development & international law, 49 (2018) 262-275 Freedman, R. and Lemay-Hébert, N., ‘Between a rock and a hard place - immunities of the United Nations and human rights’, in Ruys, T., Angelet, N. and Ferro, L. (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of immunities and international law (2019) 579-594 Friman, J., ‘Deblurring the concept of a breach of the peace as a component of contemporary international collective security’, Journal on the use of force and international law, 6 (2019) 12-51 Gao, J., ‘The Timor Sea Conciliation (Timor-Leste v. Australia): A Note on the Commission's Decision on Competence’, Ocean development & international law, 49 (2018) 208-225 Gilder, A., ‘The Effect of ‘Stabilization’ in the Mandates and Practice of UN Peace Operations’, Netherlands international law review, 66 (2019) 47-73 Ginty, R.M., ‘Liberal Peace Implementation and the Durability of Post-war Peace’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 457-486 Jenne, N., ‘Peacekeeping, Latin America and the UN Charter’s Chapter VIII: Past Initiatives and Future Prospects’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 327-353 Jiménez Sánchez, C., ‘El arreglo pacífico de controversias en el Sáhara Occidental, ¿intractable conflicto es aún posible una solución? = Peace settlement of disputes in Western Sahara, intractable conflict or it is possible to reach a solution?’, Anuario español de derecho internacional, 35 (2019) 451-486 Kedgley Laidlaw, A. and Phan, H.D., ‘Inter-State Compulsory Conciliation Procedures and the Maritime Boundary Dispute Between Timor-Leste and Australia’, Journal of international dispute settlement, 10 (2019) 126-159 Laurence, M., ‘An ‘Impartial’ Force? Normative Ambiguity and Practice Change in UN Peace Operations’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 256-280 Leloup, M., ‘Heritage Protection as Stabilization, the Emergence of a New ‘Mandated Task’ for UN Peace Operations’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 408-430 Maertens, L., ‘From Blue to Green? Environmentalization and Securitization in UN Peacekeeping Practices’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 302-326 Merrills, J., ‘The means of dispute settlement’, in Evans, M.D. (ed.), International law (2018) 548-572 Pakanati, R., ‘Reading Professor V. S. Mani from an international relations perspective’, Indian journal of international law, 58 (2018), pp. 57-83 Rhoads, E.P., ‘Putting Human Rights up Front: Implications for Impartiality and the Politics of UN Peacekeeping’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 281-301 Ridi, N., ‘The Shape and Structure of the ‘Usable Past’: An Empirical Analysis of the Use of Precedent in International Adjudication’, Journal of international dispute settlement, 10 (2019) 200-247 Rietjens, S. and Ruffa, C., ‘Understanding Coherence in UN Peacekeeping: A Conceptual Framework’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 383-407 Schaller, B., ‘Back to the Future?: Revisiting Military Confidence-Building in Europe’, S+F: Vierteljahreszeitschrift für Sicherheit und Frieden, 36 (2018) 115-120 Schuberth, M., ‘Brazilian Peacekeeping? Counterinsurgency and Police Reform in Port-au-Prince and Rio de Janeiro’, International peacekeeping, 26 (2019) 487-510 Stock, C., ‘Nigeria in der Friedenssicherung: Stabilitätsanker für (West‑)Afrika?’, Zeitschrift für Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik, 12 (2019) 73-92 Strydom, H., ‘Mali and the Sahel: Making Peace in Another Rough Neighbourhood’, Netherlands international law review, 66 (2019) 75-99 Tsybulenko, E. and Kelichavyi, B., ‘International Legal Dimensions of the Russian Occupation of Crimea’, in Sayapin, S. and Tsybulenko, E. (eds.), The use of force against Ukraine and international law: jus ad bellum, jus in bello, jus post bellum (2018) 277-296 Visser, L., ‘May the Force Be with You: The Legal Classification of Intervention by Invitation’, Netherlands international law review, 66 (2019) 21-45 Wilén, N. and Williams, P.D., ‘The African Union and coercive diplomacy: the case of Burundi’, The journal of modern African studies, 56 (2018) 673-696 Wong, I., ‘Authority to consent to the use of force in contemporary international law: the Crimean and Yemeni conflicts’, Journal on the use of force and international law, 6 (2019) 52-82 Yildiz, E., ‘Extraterritoriality reconsidered: functional boundaries as repositories of jurisdiction’, in Margolies, D.S. (et al.)(eds.), The extraterritoriality of law: history, theory, politics (2019) 215-227 Zani, M., ‘La Chine et la sécurité mondiale: à propos de la contributiion chinoise à l'édification d'une nouvel ordre international de la paix’, L' observateur des Nations Unies, 44 (2018) 87-98 .
Recommended publications
  • 'Outlawry of War'-Movement In
    THE 'OUTLAWRY OF WAR'-MOVEMENT IN THE "PEACE MOVEMENT COLLECTION" AS COMPILED BY DR JACOB TER MEULEN IN THE PEACE PALACE LIBRARY IN THE HAGUE Jeroen VERVLIET Peace Palace Library Director, The Hague (The Netherlands) ■ De Bibliotheek van het Vredespaleis bedient met zijn volkenrechtelijke collecties onder meer het Internationaal Gerechtshof van de Verenigde Naties. Een befaamde Directeur-Bibliothecaris was Jacob ter Meulen. Ter Meulen vormde twee belangrijke historische verzamelingen: over Hugo de Groot en van de Vredesbeweging. De Vredesbeweging-collectie bevat ook stukken van pacifisten die pleitten voor de uitbanning van de oorlog. Ter commemoratie van het einde van de Eerste Wereldoorlog en in een themanummer over oorlog en vrede is het uiterst opportuun om aandacht te besteden aan de Vredescollectie van de Bibliotheek van het Vredespaleis. ■ La Bibliothèque du Palais de la Paix, avec ses collections de droit international, sert, entre autres, à la Cour internationale de Justice des Nations Unies. Jacob ter Meulen était un célèbre Directeur-Bibliothécaire. Ter Meulen a constitué deux collections historiques importantes, l'une à propos de Hugo Grotius, l'autre sur le Mouvement Pacifiste. La collection du Mouvement Paci- fiste contient des documents des pacifistes qui ont plaidé en faveur de l'élimination de la guerre et de la mise hors la loi de la guerre. Pour commémorer la fin de la Première Guerre mondiale et dans un numéro spécial sur la guerre et la paix, il est extrême- ment opportun de s'intéresser à la collection du Mouvement Pacifiste de la Bibliothèque du Palais de la Paix. I VIS PACEM, PARA PACEM - if you want peace, In this article the domain of the Peace Palace Library Sprepare for peace in The Hague will be described, and the work of Dr Jacob ter Meulen as Peace Palace Library Director, Introduction in particular concerning the formation of the archival Peace Movement Collection1, which contains files 2018 marks the commemoration of the Kellogg-Briand on the 'Outlawry of War'-movement.
    [Show full text]
  • The Hague Academy of International Law Annual Report 2017
    The Hague Academy of International Law Annual Report 2017 The Hague Academy of International Law Annual Report 2017 Contents 1. Foreword by the Secretary-General 8 4. Publications in 2017 26 4.1. The Collected Courses and the Pocketbooks Series 27 2. Organization of the Academy 12 4.2. The Centre for Studies and Research 29 2.1. Curatorium 13 4.3. Special Editions 29 2.2. Secretary-General and Deputy Secretary-General for Administrative Affairs 14 2.3. Administrative Council 14 5. Finances 30 2.4. Treasurer and Financial Management 14 5.1. 2017 Financial Overview 31 2.5. Secretariat 15 5.2. Country Contributions 32 2.6. Publications Manager 15 5.3. Scholarship Sponsors 32 3. Activities and Events in 2017 16 6. The Peace Palace Library 34 3.1. Regular Academic Activities 17 3.1.1. Summer Courses on Public and Private International Law 17 3.1.1.1. General and Special Courses, Seminars and Short Courses 17 3.1.1.2. Directed Studies and Diploma 18 3.1.1.3. Afternoon Lectures 19 3.1.1.4. Doctoral Networking Meetings 19 3.1.1.5. Embassy Programme 19 3.1.1.6. AAA and Alumni Office 19 Key Figures Summer Courses 20 3.1.2. Centre for Studies and Research 21 3.1.3. External Programme 21 3.1.4. Advanced Course on International Criminal Law 22 3.2. Events 24 3.2.1. Joint meeting of the Curatorium and the Administrative Council: 24 Amendments to the Statutes 3.2.2. Ceremony bidding farewell to outgoing Secretary-General Yves Daudet 24 and welcoming the new Secretary-General Jean-Marc Thouvenin 3.2.3.
    [Show full text]
  • Legal Resources in the Library: How to Find Them, How to Use Them
    Legal resources in the Library: how to find them, how to use them Badia Fiesolana (Theatre), and ZOOM Wednesday 30 September 2020 1 Can’t I just Google it? • Why is it important to use the library catalogue and legal databases? • Information Literacy: ‘to know when and what information is needed; where and how to obtain that information; how to evaluate it critically and organise it once it is found; and how to use it in an ethical way.’* • Information is selective, organized, classified, cross-referenced * IFLA Media and Information Literacy Recommendations, 2011. 2 General starting points • Library catalogue to search books and journals on specific topics: keyword search, limit by format, modify and filter by language and time span. • Articles+ to search the contents of our e-journals and e-books • Publication Finder: to search all e-journals and e-books • Google Scholar for academic materials see instruction page for accessing it. • SSRN: working papers and articles on all areas of law 3 Catalogue and Articles +: author search 4 Catalogue and Articles+: keyword search 5 SSRN: Legal Scholarship Network search by author, title, keywords EUI Law WPs are part of this NB Register for full-text access (free) Write to [email protected] to receive a subscriber account 6 Primary sources, secondary sources, reference guides PRIMARY SOURCES SECONDARY SOURCES REFERENCE WORKS RESEARCH GUIDES International law Treaties Books/articles Research guides Int. court cases Encyclopedias Dispute settlement European law EU legislation Books/articles Reference
    [Show full text]
  • Ecocide: Developing a View from the Hague , 5 November 2012
    Organised by Institute for Environmental Security and EcoJust Ecocide: Developing a View from The Hague1, 5 November 2012 Background Note If ecocide relates to the wilful serious and/or massive destruction of the environment, it has been part of warfare since antiquity (poisoning water wells, scorched earth) up until modern times (defoliation Vietnam, bombing oil tanks First Gulf War, use of cluster bombs US invasion of Iraq 2003, bombing Lebanese oil tanks and use of cluster bombs South Lebanon 2006 Israel/Lebanon War). Art 55 of the 1978 Additional Protocol to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and Art 8 (2)(b)(iv) of the Statute of Rome of the International Criminal Court recognize the duty to prevent or to make a criminal offense “the long-term, wide-spread and severe damage to the natural environment” as a result of disproportionate military action. While actual warfare by regular armies or armed conflict resulting from guerrilla, militia or terrorist activities, including the testing of new weaponry, remain of great environmental concern, one can say that the vast majority of environmental destruction since about the 1950s results from the interplay between demographics, economic activities and the development and application of technology2 outside the realm of warfare. In 1950 we were with 2.5 billion people on the planet, now we have passed the 7 billion. 1 The workshop is part of the development of The Hague Environmental Law Facility (HELF) programme of the Institute for Environmental Security, based upon a joint proposal with the Asser Institute, and in consultation with other The Hague-based institutions.
    [Show full text]
  • The Peace Palace : Building (Of) the International Community
    doi:10.1017/aju.2020.25 SYMPOSIUM ON ART, AESTHETICS, AND INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE THE PEACE PALACE: BUILDING (OF) THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY Tanja Aalberts*, and Sofia Stolk** These things also require their material forms, their easily recognizable visible symbols, their homes. [With the Peace Palace,] international justice between nations has moved into a splendid home. The proud building is standing now, visible, and tangible: Temple, symbol and workplace. At least the spirit of peace is no longer homeless.1 At the festivities around the opening of the Peace Palace in August 1913, Bertha von Suttner—1905 Nobel peace prize winner and early advocate for an international court for arbitration—emphasized the importance of a home for international justice as a temple, a symbol, and a workplace. In line with Suttner’s observation, this essay argues that the Peace Palace is more than just a venue where international law is practiced: it provided a material home for the international community and thereby helped to sing this “imagined community”2 into exis- tence. By studying the historical context of the establishment of the Peace Palace, we draw attention to the impor- tance of the building as well as the gifts that it received from states in imagining and enacting the international community. Moreover, we discuss how two paradoxes underpinning the ideal of the international community also transferred into its material referent: the tensions between unity and individuality and between universalism and exclusion. As the residence of the Permanent Court of Arbitration and the International Court of Justice, the Peace Palace is one of the most prominent stages of international law and a visible symbol of the international community of (allegedly) equal sovereign states; the magisterial scenery to the practice of the international community to promote the goals of international justice and create a peaceful international order.
    [Show full text]
  • The Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the Peace Palace, and Internationalism Through Design at the Hague, 1899–1920
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Spring 5-3-2017 "A Vigorous Propaganda": The Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the Peace Palace, and Internationalism through Design at The Hague, 1899–1920 Daniel Pecoraro CUNY Hunter College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/167 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Pecoraro 1 “A Vigorous Propaganda”: The Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the Peace Palace, and Internationalism through Design at The Hague, 1899–1920 By Daniel Pecoraro Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History, Hunter College The City University of New York April 17, 2017 Thesis Sponsor: Elidor Mëhilli April 17, 2017 Elidor Mëhilli Date Signature Elidor Mëhilli April 17, 2017 Manu Bhagavan Date Signature of Second Reader Manu Bhagavan Pecoraro 2 Table of Contents Introduction 1 Chapter 1: Beginnings of the International Idea at The Hague (pre-1899 Conference) 6 Chapter 2: The 1899 Peace Conference: Political and Local Effects 9 Chapter 3: Mr. Carnegie’s Conundrum: Founding and Funding the Palace 14 Chapter 4: Siting the Palace 18 Chapter 5: The Design Competition and the Betrayal of the International Idea 22 Chapter 6: The 1907 Peace Conference 33 Chapter 7: Thomas Mawson and the Reclamation of Internationalism 36 Chapter 8: Constructing the Peace Palace: Reconciling Nationalism and Internationalism 39 Chapter 9: The Peace Palace Opens 42 Chapter 10: The Peace Palace in World War I 44 Epilogue: Building New International Ideals at The Hague 47 Bibliography 51 Appendix 57 Pecoraro 1 An imposing building stands behind a large metal fence in the background of a postcard from 1913.
    [Show full text]
  • Ecocide As an International Crime? Perspectives from Domestic and International Law’
    Call for Papers: ‘Ecocide as an international crime? Perspectives from domestic and international law’ The International Crimes Database invites submissions of short articles for publication in the online paper series ‘ICD Briefs’ on the theme: ‘Ecocide as an international crime? Perspectives from domestic and international law’. Ecocide as an international crime? Perspectives from domestic and international law The recent proposal by the Stop Ecocide Foundation to include ecocide as an international crime in the Rome Statute—alongside crimes against humanity, war crimes, acts of aggression, and genocide— has sparked a lively debate amongst legal scholars, practitioners and civil society. While the idea to conceive ecocide as an international crime is not a recent phenomenon, the proposal has given the discussion surrounding ecocide a renewed energy by providing a solid groundwork for how the crime can be formulated, which includes questions such as: How can ecocide be differentiated from ordinary environmental offences? Should the crime be subject to direct intent, or would negligence suffice? Instead of amending the Rome Statute to include a fifth international crime, is the better option to develop ecocide within the ambit of crimes against humanity? To what extent can legal and political developments concerning ecocide in domestic jurisdictions be extrapolated onto the international setting? Considering these indeterminacies, the ICD welcomes submissions that deal with the conception of the crime of ecocide from a diverse range of domestic and international legal perspectives. About the International Crimes Database The ICD is an online database launched in 2013 and is hosted and maintained by the T.M.C. Asser Instituut in The Hague.
    [Show full text]
  • Foreign and International Legal Research from Abroad
    Foreign and International Legal Research from Abroad The “Online resources” tab on the Heafey Library’s Foreign and Comparative Law Guide -- http://lawguides.scu.edu/foreign -- links to several free megasites (Worldlii.org; the Guide to Law Online from the Law Library of Congress; Government Gazettes Online; GlobaLex; etc.) which in turn link to webpages from and about a wide variety of countries. The “Reference” tab on this guide links to other Heafey guides on foreign law topics. The Heafey Research guide on International Legal Research -- http://lawguides.scu.edu/intlaw -- lists the sources of international law according to the Statute of the International Court of Justice and links to print and online resources for each. The tab labeled “Role of the United Nations” links to other Heafey guides on international law topics. To locate additional research guides, use: Legal Research Engine (Cornell) http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/library/WhatWeDo/ResearchGuides/CLL-Legal-Research-Engine.cfm A Selective List of Guides to Foreign Legal Research (Columbia): http://library.law.columbia.edu/guides/A_Selective_List_of_Guides_to_Foreign_Legal_Research Many law school subscriptions should be available to you from off-campus during the summer. If you have trouble connecting, email the Heafey reference desk and we will try to correct the problem ([email protected] or [email protected] ). Lexis, Westlaw and Bloomberg Law require individual passwords. Although Bloomberg does not have much foreign law yet, but both Lexis and Westlaw include foreign and international law content. So be sure you have your passwords. U.S. journals and law reviews on both Lexis and Westlaw often include articles about foreign law; occasionally a translation appears in an article or appendix.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report Carnegie Foundation Peace Palace
    Annual Report Carnegie Foundation Peace Palace 2020 “It isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn’t Piet Hein Donner enough to believe in President it. One must work Carnegie Foundation at it.” Editorial - Peace Palace – Eleanor Roosevelt The year 2020 was an extraordinary year, in every (ICJ) and the Hague Academy of International Law. future generations. With that purpose in mind, we are respect. It was a challenging year but also a year of These international institutions were able to continue glad with the decision of the Dutch government to new experiences and perspectives; for the Carnegie their work and that resulted in 15 cases that entered in reserve funds for a major renovation of the original Foundation as for so many others. the ICJ’s List and the PCA provided registry services in buildings. At present, we are engaged in a discussion 211 cases, a record 59 of which were initiated that year. with the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs on how this The year started full of hope with our New Year’s In addition, 322 students were educated by The Hague renovation of the Peace Palace can be realized while Reception. The Foundation welcomed more than 170 Academy. preserving the original purpose of its founder. partners and stakeholders. We launched our Friends program during this reception, and we are proud of the With regard to other activities of the Carnegie In 2020, we celebrated the 75th anniversary of the diverse circle of friends we are developing. Foundation, the Covid-19 pandemic forced us to search United Nations.
    [Show full text]
  • BIBLIOGRAPHY BOOKS and ARTICLES in the FIELD of The
    BIBLIOGRAPHY BOOKS and ARTICLES in the FIELD of the PREVENTION and PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT of DISPUTES Compiled by Raymond Ridderhof exclusively from materials available in the Peace Palace Library 1. BOOKS Alter, K.J., Helfer, L.R. and Madsen, M.R. (eds.), International Court Authority (2018). ISBN 9780192515032, XIX, 464 pp. Dubler, R. and Kalyk, M., Crimes against Humanity in the 21st Century: Law, Practice and Threats to international Peace and Security (2018). ISBN 9789004347687, XII, 1090 pp. Meijer, H. and Wyss, M. (eds.), The Handbook of European Defence Policies and Armed Forces (2018). ISBN 9780191831737, XXXVI, 960 pp. Müller, H. and Rauch, C. (eds.), Great Power Multilateralism and the Prevention of War: Debating a 21st Century Concert of Powers (2018). ISBN 9781138634435, XV, 267 pp. Rodiles, A., Coalitions of the Willing and international Law: the Interplay between Formality and Informality (2018). ISBN 9781108680431, XX, 296 pp. Rwengabo, S., Security Cooperation in the East African Community (2018). ISBN 9781569025475, XVIII, 336 pp. Sienknecht, M., Entgrenzte Konflikte in der Weltgesellschaft: zur Inklusion internationaler Organisationen in innerstaatliche Konfliktsysteme (2018. ISBN 9783658197193, 280 pp. Stern, O.M., Gender, Conflict and International Humanitarian Law: a Critique of the 'Principle of Distinction (2019). ISBN 9781138307704, ix, 242 pp. Tanaka, Y., The Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes (2018). ISBN 9781316687062, LVIII, 405 pp. 2. CHAPTERS IN EDITED VOLUMES AND JOURNAL ARTICLES Attinà, F., ‘Tackling
    [Show full text]
  • The Global Prosecution of Core Crimes Under International Law
    Christopher Soler The Global Prosecution of Core Crimes under International Law 123 Christopher Soler Faculty of Laws University of Malta Valletta, Malta ISBN 978-94-6265-334-4 ISBN 978-94-6265-335-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6265-335-1 Published by T.M.C. ASSER PRESS, The Hague, The Netherlands www.asserpress.nl Produced and distributed for T.M.C. ASSER PRESS by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg © T.M.C. ASSER PRESS and the author 2019 No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publi- cation does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. This T.M.C. ASSER PRESS imprint is published by the registered company Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE part of Springer Nature. The registered company address is: Heidelberger Platz 3, 14197 Berlin, Germany To the wrongly convicted and imprisoned, in the hope they would be freed; to all victims who still await criminal justice, in the belief it shall prevail; and to all journalists who, at the risk of losing their own lives, courageously expose such sad stories.
    [Show full text]
  • The Hague, Netherlands Peace Trail
    THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS PEACE TRAIL THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS PEACE TRAILTRANSATLANTIC COUNCIL How to Use This Guide This Field Guide contains information on the Hague Peace Trail Historic Trail designed by members of the Transatlantic Council in 2009. The guide is intended to be a starting point in your endeavor to learn about the history of the sites on the trail. Remember, this may be the only time your Scouts visit the Hague area in their life so make it a great time! While TAC tries to update these Field Guides when possible, it may be several years before the next revision. If you have comments or suggestions, please send them to [email protected] or post them on the TAC Nation Facebook Group Page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/27951084309/. This guide can be printed as a 5½ x 4¼ inch pamphlet or read on a tablet or smart phone. Front Cover: The Hague Peace Palace Front Cover Inset: The First Hague Conference in 1899: A meeting in the Orange Hall of Huis ten Bosch palace THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS 2 PEACE TRAIL Table of Contents Getting Prepared……………………… 4 What is the Historic Trail…………5 Historic Trail Route…….……….6-11 Trail Maps & Pictures.….……. 12-13 Background Readings…........14-26 Quick Quiz…………………………..…… 27 B.S.A. Requirements…………..……28 Notes……………………………..…… 29-31 THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS PEACE TRAIL 3 Getting Prepared Just like with any hike (or any activity in Scouting), the Historic Trail program starts with Being Prepared. 1. Review this Field Guide in detail. 2. Check local conditions and weather.
    [Show full text]