Public International Law Part III
Un podcast de Oxford University - Les vendredis
41 Épisodes
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Immunities and the Crime of Aggression - A Search for Normative Coherence
Publié: 06/03/2025 -
A Weapon Is No Subordinate. Autonomous Weapons and the Scope of Superior Responsibility
Publié: 24/02/2023 -
One Hundred Years of International Administrative Law: Is the Employment Law at International Organizations Working?
Publié: 24/02/2023 -
Geneva Declaration on Human Rights at Sea: Informal Lawmaking in Action?
Publié: 20/01/2023 -
Violent environments? Towards a political ecology of international law
Publié: 20/01/2023 -
Climate Litigation in International Organs and Courts: The Torres Strait Islanders case
Publié: 20/01/2023 -
Complicity in a War of Aggression
Publié: 20/01/2023 -
Law of the Sea in the ‘Plasticene’
Publié: 04/05/2022 -
Revisiting Sovereignty and Recognition of Oppressive Governments; A focus on Myanmar
Publié: 08/04/2022 -
‘Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown’: Recent developments regarding the immunities of heads of state and government
Publié: 01/03/2022 -
State Consent between Regionalism and Universalism: Particular Customary International Law before the International Court of Justice
Publié: 01/03/2022 -
Six Faces of Globalization: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Why It Matters
Publié: 24/01/2022 -
A Behavioral Analysis of Humanitarian Negotiations
Publié: 17/01/2022 -
'The Function of Equity in International Law
Publié: 17/01/2022 -
Tactical Admissions in International Litigation
Publié: 17/01/2022 -
Strasbourg on Compulsory Vaccination
Publié: 25/10/2021 -
Diversity Issues in International Legal Acadmia and Practice
Publié: 25/10/2021 -
International Law and the Practice of Legality: stability and change
Publié: 29/07/2021 -
Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations Between a Rock and a Hard Place - Diverging Jurisprudence at the ECtHR and the UN
Publié: 24/05/2021 -
The Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Human Rights System: Standard-setting or International Law-making?
Publié: 18/05/2021
Lectures on international law issues by eminent scholars, practitioners and judges of national and international courts. The lecture series is brought to you by the Public International Law Discussion Group, part of the Law Faculty of the University of Oxford, and is supported by the British Branch of the International Law Association and Oxford University Press. Further details of this series can be found on the Public International Law -https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/graduate-discussion-group-index/public-international-law-discussion-group Oxford website.