图书介绍
FROM‘9-11’TO THE‘IRAQ WAR 2003’ INTERNATIONAL LAW IN AN AGE OF COMPLEXITYPDF|Epub|txt|kindle电子书版本网盘下载
![FROM‘9-11’TO THE‘IRAQ WAR 2003’ INTERNATIONAL LAW IN AN AGE OF COMPLEXITY](https://www.shukui.net/cover/78/34150197.jpg)
- DOMINIC 著
- 出版社: OXFORD AND PORTLAND,OREGON
- ISBN:
- 出版时间:2004
- 标注页数:380页
- 文件大小:95MB
- 文件页数:393页
- 主题词:
PDF下载
下载说明
FROM‘9-11’TO THE‘IRAQ WAR 2003’ INTERNATIONAL LAW IN AN AGE OF COMPLEXITYPDF格式电子书版下载
下载的文件为RAR压缩包。需要使用解压软件进行解压得到PDF格式图书。建议使用BT下载工具Free Download Manager进行下载,简称FDM(免费,没有广告,支持多平台)。本站资源全部打包为BT种子。所以需要使用专业的BT下载软件进行下载。如BitComet qBittorrent uTorrent等BT下载工具。迅雷目前由于本站不是热门资源。不推荐使用!后期资源热门了。安装了迅雷也可以迅雷进行下载!
(文件页数 要大于 标注页数,上中下等多册电子书除外)
注意:本站所有压缩包均有解压码: 点击下载压缩包解压工具
图书目录
Introduction1
1 War and the International Legal Order4
1.1 The Paradoxical International Legal Order of the Twentieth Century4
1.2 The Roles of International Law and of International Lawyers6
1.3 An Age of Complexity?7
1.4 ‘9-11’: A Turning or Tipping Point?8
2 From ‘9-11’ to the ‘Iraq War 2003’9
2.1 The Attacks on the United States on 11 September 20019
2.2 The Iraq War 200311
2.2.1 Shifting the Focus11
2.2.2 The Debate in the United Kingdom12
2.2.3 ‘New’ Europe and ‘Old’ Europe13
2.2.4 Crisis in NATO14
2.2.5 Worldwide Protests15
2.2.6 International Lawyers16
2.2.7 Operatiou Iraqi Freedom16
2.3 The Link Between ‘9-11’ and the ‘Iraq War 2003’17
2.3.1 Making the Link17
2.3.2 The US Perspective18
2.4 The Legal Categorisation of the Attacks on the US on 11 September 200120
2.5 ‘9-11’ as a Turning or Tipping Point20
2.6 ‘9-11’ as a Turning Point for International Law?22
3 International Law and the Wars on Terrorism and on Iraq24
3.1 The ‘War on Terrorism’24
3.2 The Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism Committee25
3.3 Action by Regional Organisations26
3.4 International Instruments and Institutions on Terorrism27
3.5 The Objectives of the War on Terrorism28
3.6 Strategies in the War on Terrorism29
3.7 The ‘Axis of Evil’30
3.8 The Applicability of International Humanitarian Law to the War on Terror32
3.9 Human Rights and Humanitarian Law in the War on Terrorism33
3.9.1 Enemy Detainees33
3.9.2 The Establishment of Military Tribunals35
3.9.3 The Patriot Act36
3.9.4 Extradition to Third States37
3.10 Anti-Terrorist Laws in Other States37
3.11 Monitoring of Human Rights in National Emergency Laws38
3.12 International Humanitarian Law and the War on Iraq40
3.13 International Human Rights Law and the War on Iraq42
3.14 Interpreting Human Rights Law in Conflict Situations45
4 International Law and the Iraq War 200347
4.1 The Debate on the Iraq War47
4.1.1 Law and Morality47
4.2.Moral and Political Arguments52
4.2.The Legal Arguments on the War on Iraq52
4.2.1 Context52
4.2.2 Legal Bases52
4.3.Legality Based on Security Council Resolutions53
4.3.1 Security Council Authorisation53
4.3.2 The Cottnbination of SC Resolutions55
4.3.3 Resolution 67858
4.3.4 Resolution 144158
4.3.5 The ‘Material Breach’ Argntnent62
4.3.6 Autotnaticity64
4.3.7 The ‘Second Resolntion’65
4.3.8 An Appraisal of the Legality Argument66
4.4.Legality Based on Self-Defence67
4.4.1 Self- Defence and the US’s National Security Strategy:Pre-emptive Self-Defence67
4.4.2 Critics of Pre-emptive Self-Defence71
4.4.3 The UK and Pre-emptive Self Defence73
4.4.4 The Responses of Other States to the Idea of Pre-emptive Self-Defence74
4.4.5 An Assessment of Pre-emptive Self-Defence75
4.5 Legality Based on Humanitarian Intervention77
4.6 The Legal Argument Against the War in Iraq78
4.6.1 No Security Council Anthorisation78
4.6.2 Resolution 144179
4.6.3 The Absence of a Second Resohution81
4.7 Conclusion85
5 The United States and the International Legal System87
5.1 The Value of International Law and International Institutions87
5.2 State Responsibility and Rogue States89
5.3 The Interpretation of International Law Rights:Pre-emptive Self-Defence91
5.4 The Interpretation of Security Council Resolutions91
5.5 The Global Responsibilities of the United States94
5.6 Multilateralism and Institutionalism95
5.7 The Role of Evidence and of International Inspectors96
5.7.1 Pnblic Discussion96
5.7.2 The Evidence of the International Inspectors96
5.7.3 The Evidence of the UK and the US97
5.7.4 The Evaluation of the Evidence98
5.7.5 The Credibility of the UK Evidence: the ‘Sexed Up’Dossier?99
5.7.6 The Hntton Inqniry105
5.7.7 The Credibility of the US Evidence114
5.7.8 The Importance of Evidence116
5.8 The International Role of the European Union116
5.9 Nation States and Foreign Policy119
5.10 Conclusion120
6 Winning the Peace: An Iraq For the Iraqis122
6.1 The Responsibilities of the Victors122
6.2 ‘Regime Change’——A Post—Saddam Hussein Iraq123
6.3 Security in Iraq126
6.4 The Future of Iraq128
6.4.1 The New Iraq128
6.4.2 The Coalition as Occupying Powers129
6.4.3 SC Resolutions on Post-War Iraq130
6.4.4 The Role of the United Nations131
6.4.5 The Attack on the United Nations133
6.5 Political Organisation in Iraq134
6.5.1 De-Baathification134
6.5.2 The Iraqi Governing Council135
6.5.3 The New Plan for Iraq137
6.6 Economic Organisation in Iraq138
6.6.1 The Economic Challenges138
6.6.2 Humanitarian Relief139
6.6.3 Economic Reconstruction141
6.6.4 International Economic Aid143
6.7 Human Rights in Iraq143
6.7.1 The United Nations and Human Rights143
6.7.2 The UN’s Model of Human Rights144
6.8 Accountability for the Past146
6.8.1 Dealing With The Past146
6.8.2 The Iraqi Special Tribunal146
6.8.3 The Capture of Saddam Hussein148
6.8.4 Prosecutions versus Truth Commissions150
6.9 Weapons Inspections152
6.10 Measuring Success in Post-War Iraq153
6.11 Conclusion153
7 World Order(s) for the Twenty-First Century155
7.1 Introduction155
7.2 Challenges to the Post-1945 Legal Order155
7.3 Complexity and World Order157
7.4 Terrorism and World Order158
7.5 The Clash of Civilisations160
7.5.1 Islamic Fttndamentalisrn160
7.5.2 The Iraq War as a Clash of Civilisations?160
7.5.3 Terrorism versus Liberalism161
7.5.4 Assessing Islamic Fundamentalism161
7.6 The Refah Partisi Case163
7.6.1 The Position under Turkish Law163
7.6.2 The Challenge under the European Convention on Human Rights164
7.6.3 Democracy, Religion and the European Convention onHuman Rights165
7.6.4 A Plurality of Legal Systems166
7.6.5 The Sharia and Democracy167
7.6.6 Religious States and Secular States168
7.7 Change in the Middle East168
7.8 After Iraq, Who is Next?169
7.9 Post-‘9-11’ Developments in the Middle East170
7.10 Democratisation in the Middle East174
7.11 The Effects of the War on Terrorism and the War on Iraq on International Security176
7.12 The Effects of the War on Terrorism and the War on Iraq on International Legal Order178
7.13 What Future for the United Nations?180
7.14 Did the War on Iraq Harm the War on Terrorism?185
7.15 The Iraq War——The Judgments of History191
7.16 A New American Empire?192
7.17 Did ‘9-11’ Change the World?196
7.18 Not Another War——The ‘War of Ideas’196
7.19 The Day the World Shook198
DOCUMENTS201
Appendix Ⅰ: President Bush’s Address to the United Nations General Assembly in 2001, 1o November 2001203
Appendix Ⅱ: The United States President’s State of the Union Address 2002, 29 January 2002207
Appendix Ⅲ: The National Security Strategy of the United States of America, 17 September 2002213
Appendix Ⅳ: Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Assessment of the British Government, 24 September 2002235
Appendix Ⅴ: Presentation of Colin Powell, United States Secretary of State, to the United Nations Security Council, on ‘Iraq——Failing to Disarm’, 5 February 2003264
Appendix Ⅵ: Hans Blix (Chairman of UNSCOM): Briefingto the Security Council, 14 February 2003281
Appendix Ⅶ: The Advice of the United Kingdom Attorney-General, Lord Goldsmith, on ‘The Legal Basis for the Use of Force against Iraq’, 17 March 2003286
Appendix Ⅷ: Iraq: Legal Basis for the Use of Force, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Memorandum,17 March 2003287
Appendix Ⅸ: United Kingdom Prune Minister’s Statements on Iraq to the House of Commons on 25 February 2003 and 1 8 March 2003290
Appendix Ⅹ: President Bush’s Address to the United Nations General Assembly in 2003, 23 September 2003304
Appendix Ⅺ: Remarks by the President Bush at Whitehall Palace, 19 November 2003309
Appendix Ⅻ: Observations in the Report of the Secretary-General [on Iraq] pursuant to paragraph 24 of resolution 1483 (2003) and paragraph 12 of resolution 1511 (2003),5 December 2003315
Appendix ⅩⅢ: Selected Security Council Resohutions on Iraq 1990—2003318
Security Council Resolution 660 (1990), 2 August 1990318
Security Council Resolution 678 (1990), 29 November 1990319
Security Council Resolution 687 (1991), 3 April 1991320
Security Council Resolution 688, (1991), 5 April 1991327
Security Council Resolution 1154 (1998), 2 March 1998328
Security Council Resolution 1284 (1999) 17 December 1999329
Security Council Resolution 1441 (2002), 2o December 2002335
Security Council Resolution 1472 (2003), 28 March 2003339
Security Council Resolution 1476 (2003), 24 April 2003342
Security Council Resolution 1483 (2003), 22 May 2003343
Security Council Resolution 1490 (2003), 3 July 2003349
Security Council Resolution 1500 (2003), 14 August 2003350
Security Council Resolution 1511 (2003), 16 October 2003351
Security Council Resolution 1518 (2003), 24 November 2003354
Appendix ⅩⅣ: Selected Security Council Resolutions on Terrorism 1999—2003355
Security Council Resolution 1267 (1999), 15 October 1999355
Security Council Resolution 1368 (2001), 12 September 2001358
Security Council Resolution 1373 (2001), 28 September 2001359
Security Council Resolution 1377 (2001), 12 November 2001362
Security Council Resolution 1452 (2002), 20 December 2002364
Security Council Resolution 1455 (2003), 17 January 2003366
Security Council Resolution 1456 (2003), 20 January 2003369
Security Council Resolution 1526 (2004), 30 January 2004372
Index377