Nigerian Yearbook of International Law 2018/2019

Nigerian Yearbook of International Law 2018/2019

Eboe-Osuji, Chile; Emeseh, Engobo; Akinkugbe, Olabisi D.

Springer Nature Switzerland AG

08/2022

465

Mole

Inglês

9783030695965

15 a 20 dias

724

Descrição não disponível.
Part I - International Law: New Reflections on Humankind as a Subject of International Law by Judge Antonio Augusto Cancado Trindade.- Can the Law Respond to Threatened Apocalypse? by Judge David Baragwanath.- The Rule of International Law - Where Are We Going? by Judge Howard Morrison.- Part II - Environmental Law and Natural Resources Law: Coastal State Regulation of the Use of Arms in the Private Protection of Commercial Vessels in the Gulf of Guinea: A Nigerian Perspective by Osatohanmwen O. Anastasia Eruaga.- Joint Development of Transboundary Natural Resources - Lessons from the Nigeria-Sao Tome e Principe Joint Development Zone by Adaeze Okoye, Mariam Masini, and Alache Fisho.- Implementing Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)-based Electronic Waste Institutions in Nigeria: Lessons from the Global North by Irekpitan Okukpon.- Part III - Intellectual Property: The Participation of Pharmaceutical Drug Industry in Patent Governance and Law-Making: A Case Study of India and Nigeria by Amaka Vanni.- Part IV - International Criminal Law: The International Criminal Court - What Has It Accomplished? by Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji.- Improving the Efficiency of International Criminal Courts and Tribunals: The Paris Declaration on the Effectiveness of International Criminal Justice by Judge Ivana Hrdlickova, Adrian Plevin and Amanda Fang.- The International Criminal Court on the Rohingyas' Situation and the Early Scholarly Echo of the Decision by Judge Peter Kovacs.- The Law's Response to the Plight of Victims of Trauma in the Context of International Criminal Justice by Judge Daniel D. Ntanda Nsereko.- Part V - International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law: TWAILing the Minimum Core Concept: Re-thinking the Minimum Core of Economic and Social Rights in the Third World by CarolineOmari Lichuma.- Health and Development in Africa: How Far Can the Human Rights Jurisprudence Go? by Olasupo Owoeye.- Determining the Termination of a Non-International Armed Conflict: An Analysis of the Boko Haram Insurgency in Northern Nigeria by Solomon Ukhuegbe and Alero I. Fenemigho.- Part VI - International Economic Law/International Investment Law: African Investment Agreement Reform and its Contribution to Sustainable Foreign Investment by Gudrun Monika Zagel.- The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the Imperative of Democratic Legitimacy: An Analysis by Babatunde Fagbayibo.- Part VII - Contemporary Challenges/Emerging Issues: Technology and the Law: The impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on Litigation and Dispute Resolution in Africa by Izuoma Egeruoh-Adindu.- Child Rights Protection, Nigerian Federalism and Culture: Irreconcilable Goals? by Fife Lekan Ogunde.- Part VIII - Case Comment: Decolonising the Chagos Islands? by John Reynolds.
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
International Court of Justice;ICJ;Chagos case;Intellectual property law;IP law;Law and technology;African Continental Free Trade Area Agreement;AfCFTA;Boko Haram;Humanitarian law;Human rights;Armed conflict;African Investment Agreement Reform