Recueil des cours : collected courses of the Hague Academy of International Law

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Recueil des cours : collected courses of the Hague Academy of International Law

Brill Nijhoff, 2022

  • t. 426 : 2022

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注記

At head of title: Académie de droit international

Includes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Pieter Jean KUIJPER, Delegation and International Organizations; As Exemplified by the United Nations and the European Union Based on a comparative approach, this course analyzes the diverging development of the delegation of powers, in particular legislative or regulatory powers, in the UN and the EU. It is based largely on the primary sources, documents and decisions of the organs of these organizations, including the relevant judicial decisions. After a brief discussion of some basic notions involved in delegation of powers, it makes a basic distinction between delegation of a constitutional nature and delegation of an administrative law nature. It continues with a preliminary chapter on delegation of powers in a limited number of national legal systems, as it is likely that these may have had some influence on delegation within international organizations, when these were first confronted with the problem of delegation. These national systems are characterized by a strong resistance against the delegation of truly legislative powers, but at the same time by the growing and unavoidable need for delegation in specialized domains of the modern administrative state, where certainly the legislature, but in many areas also the executive, lack the necessary knowledge. Stephen C. McCAFFREY, The Evolution of the Law of International Watercourses.

目次

Pieter Jean KUIJPER, Delegation and International Organizations. Excerpt of Table of Contents: Chapter I. What inspired this lecture series? 21 Chapter II. Delegation of powers in national legal systems 27 A. The United States 28 B. France 35 C. Italy 48 D. Germany 55 E. National law of delegation in an administrative context: The Dutch example 63 F. Some concluding remarks on national systems of delegation 70 G. Some remaining loose ends inspired by national law and practice on legislative delegation 72 H. Some basic notions related to delegation 74 Chapter III. Delegation within the United Nations: the General Assembly and the secretariat 80 A. Delegation to a newly created body: The United Nations Adminis- trative Tribunal 80 B. The ICSC and the Molinier case: A technical delegation to a newly created body? 84 C. The Secretary-General's bulletin on delegation of authority 89 D. The different powers delegated to the ICSC: Advisory and decisional 92 E. The story of Mr Kompass: A well-intentioned civil servant sent on administrative leave 106 F. Conclusions on delegation by the General Assembly and Secretariat. 109 Chapter IV. Delegation by the Security Council 113 A. The Tadic case 114 B. The financing of the creation and functioning of the ICTY 118 C. Delegation in connection with the application of Chapter VII UN Charter 121 D. The UN mission in Kosovo 124 E. Delegation by the Security Council to sanctions committees 128 F. UN delegation to one or more Member States and International Organizations 138 G. Conclusions on delegation by the Security Council 152 Chapter V. Delegation in the European Union 155 A. Introduction: The Meroni case 155 B. The Rome Treaty and management committees 161 C. The Single European Act of 1987 and the codification of the imple- menting committees 165 D. From the Treaty of Amsterdam and the second comitology decision to the Treaty of Nice 171 E. After the Treaty of Nice and up until the Treaty of Lisbon 177 F. The Treaty of Lisbon, delegation of legislative powers and the third comitology decision 182 G. The post-Lisbon cases and the present state of the law of delegation in the EU 191 H. Administrative delegation within the Commission and other institutions 204 I. Delegation to EU agencies 213 J. Some final remarks on delegation in the EU 225 Chapter VI. Concluding remarks 229 Stephen C. McCAFFREY, The Evolution of the Law of International Watercourses. Chapter 1. Introduction and Overview 257 I. Overview of the Course 259 1. The Umma-Lagash Treaty (ca. 3100 BC) 259 2. Grant to a monastery by Charlemagne (805 AD) 260 3. The Peace of Westphalia (1648) 261 4. The Congress of Vienna (1815) 261 5. The First Assertion of a Rule concerning the Non-navigational Uses of International Watercourses (1856) 262 6. The "Harmon Doctrine" (1895) 262 7. The 1906 Convention between Mexico and the United States . . 263 8. The US Supreme Court decision in Kansas v. Colorado (1907) 263 9. The 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty, Canada-United States . . . 264 10. The Madrid Resolution of the Institute of International Law (1911) 264 11. The Donauversinkung Case (1927) 264 12. The River Oder Case (1929) 265 13. The Trail Smelter Arbitration (1941) 266 14. The Salzburg Resolution of the Institute of International Law (1961) 266 15. The Helsinki Rules on the Uses of the Waters of International Rivers of the International Law Association (1966) 266 16. The Athens Resolution of the Institute of international law (1979) 267 17. International Law Commission's draft articles on the Law of International Watercourses (1994) 267 18. Convention on the law of the non-navigational uses of inter- national watercourses (1997) 267 19. Illustrative case law 268 II. Definitions 281 Chapter 2. Fresh water and its use by humans 283 I. Introduction 283 II. The impact of climate change on shared freshwater resources . . . 290 III. Uneven distribution 293 IV. Water transfers 294 V. Groundwater: out of sight, out of mind? 300 1. The general characteristics of groundwater 301 2. The international legal regulation of groundwater 304 3. Groundwater in the two multilateral treaties concerning inter- national watercourses 304 4. Groundwater in case law 305 5. The ILC's resolution on "Confined Transboundary Groundwater" 308 6. The ILC's draft articles on the Law of Transboundary Aquifers 309 VI. Conclusion 311 Chapter 3. Beyond the Hobbesean state of nature: The perceived need for reliability of access to shared freshwater resources and early evidence of a quest for stability 313 I. Introduction 313 II. "Nasty, brutish and short" 313 III. Further evidence from treaty practice 315 IV. The quest for stability in fluvial relations 315 V. Lessons from the fate of the "Harmon Doctrine" 318 1. Background 318 2. Harmon's Opinion 322 3. The events following the issuance of Harmon's opinion 325 VI. The 1906 Treaty 329 VII. Conclusion 330 Chapter 4. Navigation: nature's highways in a forested land 331 I. Introduction 331 II. Early practice 331 III. Development of the law of navigational uses of international watercourses in Western Europe 333 IV. Influential cases and the law as it stands today 338 V. The River Oder case 339 VI. The Oscar Chinn case 341 VII. The Navigational and Related Rights case 343 VIII. The Contributions of Learned Societies 346 IX. Conclusions 349 Chapter 5. Evolution of the law governing the non-navigational uses of international watercourses 351 I. Introduction 351 II. Ancient times 351 III. The Institute of International Law 360 IV. The International Law Association 363 V. Indicia of the evolution of the law 366 1. From preeminence of navigation to the absence of inherent priorities 366 2. From the surface water channel to the system of waters 368 3. From piecemeal problem-solving to integrated management and development 372 4. From protection of fisheries to protection of fish 374 5. From "no harm" to equitable utilization 376 Chapter 6. Conclusions and outlook 381 I. Some conclusions 381 II. Outlook 384

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BD02704338
  • ISBN
    • 9789004517714
  • 出版国コード
    ne
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Leiden
  • ページ数/冊数
    384 p.
  • 大きさ
    25 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
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