Complicity and its limits in the law of international responsibility / (Record no. 592544)

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
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Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Collection code Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Source of acquisition Cost, normal purchase price Full call number Barcode Date last seen Cost, replacement price Koha item type
    Dewey Decimal Classification     Reference Symbiosis Law School, Noida Symbiosis Law School, Noida REFERENCE CUPBOARD 10/11/2017 52 3288.85 342.088 LAN.C SLSN-B-11454 22/02/2024 6223.00 Books