Duelling for supremacy : international law vs. national fundamental principles
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Bibliographic Information
Duelling for supremacy : international law vs. national fundamental principles
Cambridge University Press, 2019
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
It is a settled rule of international law that a State may not rely on the provisions of its 'internal law' as justification for failing to comply with international obligations. However, the judiciaries of most countries, including those with a high record of compliance with international norms, have increasingly felt the need to preserve the area of fundamental principles, where the State's inclination to retain full sovereignty seems to act as an unbreakable 'counter-limit' to the limitations deriving from international law. This volume explores this trend by adopting a comparative perspective, addressing the question of how conflicts between international law and national fundamental principles are dealt with and resolved within a specific legal system. The contributing authors identify common tendencies and fundamental differences in the approaches and evaluate the implications of this practice for the future of the principle of supremacy of international law.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction Fulvio Maria Palombino
- 2. Brasil Paula Almeida
- 3. Canada Stephane Beaulac
- 4. China Pierfrancesco Rossi
- 5. France Raphaele Rivier
- 6. Germany Niels Petersen
- 7. Greece Mariela Apostolaki and Antonios Tzanakopoulos
- 8. India Vinai Singh
- 9. Indonesia Simon Butt
- 10. Israel Yuval Shany
- 11. Italy Daniele Amoroso
- 12. Japan Hajime Yamamoto and Yota Negishi
- 13. Mexico Francisca Pou Gimenez and Alejandro Rodiles
- 14. Netherlands Andre Nollkaemper and Rosanne van Alebeek
- 15. Nigeria Babafemi Akinrinade
- 16. Russia Maria Smirnova
- 17. South Africa Hannah Woolaver
- 18. Turkey Ikboljon Qoraboyev and Emre Turkut
- 19. United Kingdom Eirik Bjorge and Ewan Smith
- 20. United States David Sloss
- 21. Conclusions Fulvio Maria Palombino.
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