MARC details
000 -LEADER |
fixed length control field |
07264pam a2200217 i 4500 |
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION |
fixed length control field |
160426s2016 enk b 001 0 eng |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER |
International Standard Book Number |
9781782259404 |
082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER |
Classification number |
342.088 |
Cutter |
LAN.C |
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME |
Personal name |
Lanovoy, Vladyslav, |
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT |
Title |
Complicity and its limits in the law of international responsibility / |
Statement of responsibility, etc |
Vladyslav Lanovoy. |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) |
Place of publication, distribution, etc |
London |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc |
Hart Publishing |
Date of publication, distribution, etc |
2016 |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION |
Extent |
l, 383 pages ; |
Dimensions |
24 cm. |
490 1# - SERIES STATEMENT |
Series statement |
Studies in international law ; |
Volume number/sequential designation |
volume 59 |
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE |
Bibliography, etc |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC. |
Summary, etc |
Contents<br/>Introduction<br/>The origins of complicity in International law<br/>The regimes of complicity in International law<br/>The ILC rules on responsibility for complicity<br/>Establishing responsibility for complicity<br/>Legal consequences and implementat ion of responsibility for complicity<br/>Complicity as a basis of attribution of conduct<br/>Conclusion.<br/>Machine generated contents note: 1.Introduction<br/>I.Research Question<br/>II.The Definition of Complicity in International Law<br/>III.Responsibility for Complicity in an Internationally Wrongful Act<br/>IV.The Treatment of Responsibility for Complicity in Doctrine<br/>V.The Model(s) of Responsibility for Complicity<br/>VI.Methodology<br/>VII.The Role of Responsibility for Complicity in the International Legal Order<br/>VIII.Structure<br/>2.The Origins of Complicity in International Law<br/>I.Introduction<br/>II.The Antecedents of Complicity in the Operation of Neutrality<br/>A.Rights and Duties of Neutrals<br/>B.The Prohibition of Aid or Assistance to Belligerents<br/>III.Complicity in the Writings of Founding Fathers of International Law<br/>A.The Emergence of Responsibility as an Independent Legal Category<br/>B.Complicity<br/>-Attribution of Responsibility or Attribution of Conduct<br/>IV.Interim Conclusions<br/>3.The Regimes of Complicity in International Law<br/>Contents note continued: II.Complicity in International Criminal Law<br/>A.Complicity in the Nuremberg Charter<br/>B.Codification of Complicity in the Genocide Convention<br/>C.Aiding and Abetting in the Practice of the Ad Hoc Tribunals and the ICC<br/>i.Material Element (Actus Reus)<br/>ii.Mental Element (Mens Rea)<br/>iii.Complicity in the ICC Rome Statute<br/>D.Parallels to Complicity in the Law of International Responsibility<br/>III.Codification of Complicity in the Law of International Responsibility<br/>A.Complicity's Big Bang (Ago)<br/>B.Complicity's Revolution (Crawford)<br/>C.Complicity's Restatement (Gaja)<br/>4.The ILC Rules on Responsibility for Complicity<br/>H.General Regime of Complicity (Articles 16 ARSIWA and 14 ARIO)<br/>A.Preliminary Remarks<br/>B.Constituent Elements<br/>i.The Threshold of Complicity<br/>ii.Knowledge of the Circumstances of the Internationally Wrongful Act<br/>Contents note continued: iii.Complicity with a View to Facilitating the Commission of the Internationally Wrongful Act<br/>iv.Opposability of the Obligation Breached<br/>III.Aggravated Regime of Complicity (Articles 41(2) ARSIWA and 42(2) ARIO)<br/>B.Constituent Elements of the Obligation of Non-assistance<br/>i.The Existence of a Serious Breach of Peremptory Norm of International Law<br/>ii.The Operation of the Obligation Not to Render Aid or Assistance<br/>IV.Complicity of States in an Internationally Wrongful Act of the International Organisation (Article 58 ARIO)<br/>V.Complicity and Other Forms of Shared or Ancillary Responsibility<br/>A.Other Forms of Indirect Attribution of Responsibility<br/>i.Direction and Control<br/>ii.Coercion<br/>iii.Circumvention of International Obligations<br/>B.Joint and Several Responsibility<br/>i.Separability of International Responsibility<br/>ii.Wrongful Acts Committed by a Common Organ or Jointly Run Operations<br/>Contents note continued: VI.Interim Conclusions<br/>5.Establishing Responsibility for Complicity<br/>II.Material Element<br/>A.The Content of Complicity and its Link to the Principal Wrongful Act<br/>i.Comments of States and International Organisations<br/>ii.The Fattispecie of Complicity in Practice<br/>a.Delivering Military Aid or Assistance to States and Non-State Actors<br/>b.Delivering Aid or Assistance Pursuant to a Treaty or Export Licences<br/>c.Authorising or Failing to Object to the Use of Territory<br/>d.Financing and Granting Export Credit Guarantees<br/>e.Providing Technical Assistance, Intelligence and Personnel<br/>f.Delivering Aid or Assistance in the Context of Multinational Military Intervention<br/>g.Extraditing Foreign Nationals<br/>iii.Preliminary Conclusions<br/>B.The Content of Complicity in Primary Norms<br/>i.Arms Control Treaties Prohibiting Complicity<br/>a.The Chemical Weapons Convention<br/>Contents note continued: b.The Convention on the Prohibition of Anti-personnel Mines<br/>c.The Convention on Cluster Munitions<br/>ii.Rules Prohibiting Complicity in the Use of Force<br/>a.Complicity in the Violations of Jus ad Bellum<br/>1.Article 3(f) of the Declaration on Aggression<br/>2.Article 2(5) UN Charter<br/>3.Modern Regulation of Neutrality<br/>4.Obligations of Due Diligence<br/>5.Concluding Remarks<br/>b.Complicity in the Violations of Jus in Bello<br/>iii.Primary Rules Prohibiting Complicity in Human Rights Violations<br/>C.Complicity and Due Diligence: Overlap or Parallel Functioning?<br/>i.Knowledge-based Distinction<br/>ii.Character and Control-based Distinction<br/>iii.Implications for the Material Scope of Complicity<br/>D.Concluding Remarks<br/>III.Cognitive Element: Knowledge and/or Intention?<br/>A.Knowledge: `Circumstances of the Internationally Wrongful Act'<br/>B.Intention: `With the View to Facilitating the Commission of the Wrongful Act'<br/>C.Normative Solution(s)<br/>Contents note continued: IV.Opposability Element<br/>A.Importing the Pacta Tertiis Rule: Is it Appropriate in the Law of International Responsibility?<br/>B.Opposability Element: A Requiem of Responsibility for Complicity?<br/>i.The Character of the Obligation Breached<br/>ii.The Moment in Time for Assessing the Opposability Requirement<br/>V.Interim Conclusions<br/>6.Legal Consequences and Implementation of Responsibility for Complicity<br/>II.Legal Consequences and Content of Responsibility for Complicity<br/>A.Cessation (Articles 30(a) ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>B.Assurances and Guarantees of Non-repetition (Articles 30(b) ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>C.Reparation (Articles 31 ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>i.Causal Analysis<br/>-Linking Injury to the Wrongful Conduct<br/>a.The ILC's Approach to Causation in General<br/>b.Applying Causal Tests to Complicity<br/>c.Multiple Chains of Causation and Attenuation of Responsibility<br/>ii.Forms of Reparation<br/>a.Restitution (Articles 35 ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>Contents note continued: b.Compensation (Articles 36 ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>c.Satisfaction (Articles 37 ARSIWA/ARIO)<br/>III.Implementation of Responsibility for Complicity<br/>A.Invocation of Responsibility for Complicity<br/>B.Countermeasures Against Complicit States or International Organisations<br/>C.Responsibility for Complicity in Consent-based Dispute Settlement<br/>7.Complicity as a Basis of Attribution of Conduct<br/>II.Existing Grounds of Attribution of Conduct<br/>III.Complicity Filling the Gaps in the Current Regime of Attribution<br/>8.Conclusion<br/>I.Complicity and its Limits in the Law of International Responsibility<br/>II.A Revised Model of Complicity: From Concept to Function?. |
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM |
Topical term or geographic name as entry element |
Government liability (International law) |
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM |
Topical term or geographic name as entry element |
International criminal law. |
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM |
Topical term or geographic name as entry element |
Accomplices. |
830 #0 - SERIES ADDED ENTRY--UNIFORM TITLE |
Uniform title |
Studies in international law (Oxford, England) ; |
Volume number/sequential designation |
v. 59. |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) |
Source of classification or shelving scheme |
Dewey Decimal Classification |
Item type |
Books |