000 | nam a22 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c15143 _d15143 |
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005 | 20170420113036.0 | ||
008 | 170420b2016 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a9789004299887 | ||
040 | _aMAIN | ||
041 | _aENG | ||
082 |
_a341.58 _bRON/COE |
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100 | _aRonzitti, Natalino (Ed.) | ||
245 |
_aCoercive diplomacy, sanctions and international law _cedited by Natalino Ronzitti. |
||
260 |
_aLeiden : _bBrill Nijhoff, _c2016. |
||
300 | _a315 p. | ||
500 | _aTable of Contents : Chapter 1. Sanctions as instruments of coercive diplomacy : an international law perspective Chapter 2. Compatibility and legitimacy of sanctions regimes Chapter 3. Confronting the implementation and enforcement challenges involved in imposing economic sanctions Chapter 4. Sanctions imposed by the European Union : legal and institutional aspects Chapter 5. Practice makes perfect, eventually? : unilateral state sanctions and the extraterritorial effects of national legislation Chapter 6. Sanctions against non-state actors Chapter 7. Sanctions and the protection of human rights : the role of sanctions committees Chapter 8. Sanctions and individual rights Chapter 9. International legal limits on the ability of states to lawfully impose international economic/financial sanctions Chapter 10. An overview of international sanctions' impact on treaties and contracts Chapter 11. UN sanctions targeting individuals and ICC proceedings : how to achieve a mutually reinforcing interaction Chapter 12. From effective to useful sanctions : lessons learned from the experience of the European Union Chapter 13. Western economic and political sanctions as instruments of strategic competition with Russia : opportunities and risks Conclusion | ||
650 | _aInternational Law. | ||
942 | _cBK |