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E-grāmata: Globalization and Common Responsibilities of States [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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There is a growing awareness that international law insufficiently protects common global interests and that States and non-State actors need to work together to protect global aims. The focus of this book is on the different fields of international law where there is a need for global cooperation to achieve common aims, for example: the law of the sea; protection of world cultural heritage; sustainable development, biological diversity and climate change; human rights; and international crimes. The volume also identifies the legal developments which have taken place, for example treaties which use the language of ’common heritage of mankind’ or ’common concern of humanity’, thereby identifying global concerns and reflecting a global set of values and interests independent of the interests of States.
Acknowledgements vii
Series Preface ix
Introduction xi
PART I CONCEPTUAL ISSUES
1 `Common Concern of Humanity', Iustum Aequum Salutare, V, pp. 33--40
3(8)
Dinah Shelton
2 `Justice and the Distribution of Greenhouse Gas Emissions', Journal of Global Ethics, 5, pp. 125--46
11(22)
Simon Caney
3 `Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in International Law', American Journal of International Law, 98, pp. 276--301
33(26)
Christopher D. Stone
4 `Conceptualising the Relationship between Jus Cogens and Erga Omnes Rules', Nordic Journal of International Law, 66, pp. 211--39
59(30)
Michael Byers
5 `The Common Heritage of Mankind: Utopia or Reality?' International Journal, 40, pp. 423--41
89(22)
Alexandre Kiss
PART II RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT
6 `Jurisdiction without Territory: From the Holy Roman Empire to the Responsibility to Protect', Michigan Journal of International Law, 30, pp. 981--1015
111(36)
Anne Orford
7 `Responsibility to Protect: Political Rhetoric or Emerging Legal Norm?', American Journal of International Law, 101, pp. 99--120
147(24)
Carsten Stahn
PART III UNIVERSAL JURISDICTION
8 `Imagining the International Community: The Constitutive Dimension of Universal Jurisdiction', Human Rights Quarterly, 31, pp. 129--62
171(34)
Adeno Addis
9 `The Legal Limits of Universal Jurisdiction', Virginia Journal of International Law, 47, pp. 149--200
205(54)
Anthony J. Colangelo
PART IV INTERNATIONAL SPACES
10 `Imagine There Are No Possessions: Legal and Moral Basis of the Common Heritage Principle in Space Law, Manchester Journal of International Economic Law, 2, pp. 30--58
259(30)
Gbenga Oduntan
11 `The Common Heritage of Mankind: An Adequate Regime for Managing the Deep Seabed?', Melbourne Journal of International Law, 4, pp. 376--405
289(32)
Edward Guntrip
PART V ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
12 `Solidarity, Justice and Climate Change Law', Melbourne Journal of International Law, 10, pp. 493--508
321(16)
Angela Williams
13 `Common Concern of Humankind and Its Implications in International Environmental Law', Macquarie Journal of International and Comparative Environmental Law, 5, pp. 133--47
337(16)
Jimena Murillo Chavarro
14 `Custodial Sovereignty: Reconciling Sovereignty and Global Environmental Challenges amongst the Vestiges of Colonialism', Netherlands International Law Review, 55, pp. 323--41
353(22)
Werner Scholtz
PART VI CULTURAL HERITAGE
15 `Beyond State Sovereignty: The Protection of Cultural Heritage as a Shared Interest of Humanity', Michigan Journal of International Law, 25, pp. 1209--28
375(20)
Francesco Francioni
16 `World Cultural Heritage: Obligations to the International Community as a Whole?' International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 53, pp. 189--209
395(24)
Roger O'Keefe
PART VII HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEVELOPMENT
17 `Correcting Globalisation in Health: Transnational Entitlements versus the Ethical Imperative of Reducing Aid-Dependency', Public Health Ethics, 1, pp. 154--70
419(18)
Gorik Ooms
Rachel Hammonds
18 `Human Rights, the Millennium Development Goals, and the Future of Development Cooperation', World Development, 35, pp. 2041--55
437(16)
Paul J. Nelson
19 `Transnational Human Rights Obligations', Human Rights Quarterly, 24, pp. 781--98
453(20)
Sigrun I. Skogly
Mark Gibney
PART VIII GLOBAL SOCIETY
20 `Writing about Impunity and Environment: The "Silver Jubilee" of the Bhopal Catastrophe', Journal of Human Rights and the Environment, 1, pp. 23--44
473(22)
Upendra Baxi
21 `International Law and Social Movements: Challenges of Theorizing Resistance', Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, 41, pp. 397--433
495(38)
Balakrishnan Rajagopal
Name Index 533
Koen De Feyter is the Chair of International Law at the Law Faculty of the University of Antwerp. He is the spokesperson for the Law and Development research group at the University of Antwerp Law Research School. He is the convenor of an international research network on Localising Human Rights, currently undertaking research in China, India and the DRC. He is the author of Human Rights: Social justice in the age of the market (2005) and World Development Law (2001) and has edited numerous books including The Local Relevance of Human Rights (2011),The Tension between Group Rights and Human Rights (2008) and Out of the Ashes: Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of Human Rights (2006).