The new world order and the Security Council : testing the legality of its acts

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The new world order and the Security Council : testing the legality of its acts

by Mohammed Bedjaoui ; preface by Boutros Boutros-Ghali ; [translated from French by Bernard Noble]

M. Nijhoff , Distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic, c1994

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English and French text

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The question of the judicial review of the acts of the Security Council is one of the most urgent and revealing contemporary issues facing the United Nations. Does the Security Council, acting with the unanimous support of its permanent members, have unlimited powers? Where do its prerogatives end? Is the Security Council alone entitled to decide where its powers begin and end? Are the actions of the Security Council exempt from any control? Judge Bedjaoui's intimate knowledge of the International Court of Justice enables him to approach the issue of the legality of Security Council actions from the perspective of a jurist. His book is both a work on positive law and an essay on normative law.

Table of Contents

Preface. I. Introductory Remarks. II. The San Francisco Legacy and its Management Hitherto. III. Recent Development Regarding the Question of Legality-Control within the United Nations. IV. Possible Contribution of the International Court of Justice to Testing the Legality of the Acts of International Political Organs. V. Myths and Realities of the Judicial Settlement of International Differences, whether Arising between States or Emanating from International Organizations. VI. The Limits of Another Form of Supervision: Political Control by the General Assembly. VII. Conclusion. Bibliography. Documents: I. Documents of the United Nations and the International Court of Justice. II. Documents of Learned Bodies. III. Scholarly Works. IV. Symposia. Index.

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