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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 11721 on page 1 of 469
Marked
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Domestic interests, international bargaining, and IMF lending
(2010)
Breen, Michael
Domestic interests, international bargaining, and IMF lending
(2010)
Breen, Michael
Abstract:
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) treats its members very differently; some of the countries that borrow from the Fund receive huge loans while others in similar circumstances receive smaller loans. In this article, I argue that the difference in treatment is determined largely by domestic political conflict in the IMF’s most powerful member-states. My contention is that the IMF offers governments bigger loans when interest groups in the G-5 (the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Japan) pressure their governments into achieving this outcome. While domestic political processes in the G-5 drive government policy towards the IMF, governments must also bargain with one another on the international stage if they are to influence IMF policy. With few exceptions, most previous research has tended to ‘black box’ the intergovernmental aspect of this process. In this article, I set out and test a novel explanation of how governments arrive at collective decisions through...
http://doras.dcu.ie/15381/
Marked
Mark
International and domestic pressures on Irish foreign policy: an analysis of the UN Security Council term 2001-2
(2005)
Doyle, John
International and domestic pressures on Irish foreign policy: an analysis of the UN Security Council term 2001-2
(2005)
Doyle, John
Abstract:
Recent debate on Irish foreign policy has often been framed by the presumed influence of the EU Common Foreign and Security Policy and the dependence of the Irish economy on Foreign Direct Investment from the US. More broadly, small states are generally assumed to have little significant influence on world events. Empirical research on these issues is difficult in the Irish context given the often guarded nature of Irish foreign policy pronouncements. Ireland’s term on the UN Security Council in 2001 and 2002 offers an opportunity both to examine Irish foreign policy decision-making at the highest international level and to look at the capacity of a small state to have influence. The results of this study suggest that contrary to common perceptions, Irish diplomats on the Council did regularly disagree with the US on foreign-policy decisions and that the influence of EU membership was very limited—primarily because there was often no common European policy on the most controversial ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/2133/
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Why Did China Bid Twice for the Olympic Games? Sport, Nationalism and International Politics
(2012)
Wei, Fan; Hong, Fan; Lu, Zhouxiang
Why Did China Bid Twice for the Olympic Games? Sport, Nationalism and International Politics
(2012)
Wei, Fan; Hong, Fan; Lu, Zhouxiang
Abstract:
Hosting the Olympic Games is seen by China and most Asian nations as a means for national restoration, the construction of national identity, economic prosperity and international recognition. In this sense the Olympic Games have significant symbolic power. China ended its isolation in 1978, re-joined the International Olympic Committee in 1979; In 1984, they took part in the Summer Olympic Games for the first tim e since the early fifties; and in 1985 established their "Olympic Strategy". Hosting the Olympic Games was an im portant part o f the strategy to make China a sporting superpower, as well as a political and economic power, that could compete on equal terms w ith the US in the West and Japan and South Korea in the East; Thus Beijing was a candidate city for the Games in 2000 and 2008. This paper will examine the reasons for China's tw o bids; the factors which resulted in the failure o f the first bid and the success o f the second; and the impact of the bids...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/13024/
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The Creation of International Commercial Law: Sovereignty Felled?
(2004)
Gopalan, Sandeep
The Creation of International Commercial Law: Sovereignty Felled?
(2004)
Gopalan, Sandeep
Abstract:
The creation of international commercial law presents an interesting paradox for proponents of sovereignty in international law. Indeed, it could be argued that the creation of international commercial law is the vanishing point of sovereignty in that nation states are becoming increasingly less important in the creation of international commercial law with the growth of regional organizations, non-state actors, and international arbitration. This is spurred on by the march of globalization and the consequent need for international commercial law. The term "harmonization" will be used as a surrogate to discuss the creation of international commercial law, as it is the primary means by which international commercial law is created. This article seeks to chart this trend and show that nation states are being marginalized and will become significantly less relevant as more and more international legal instruments are created. In Part II, I paint the landscape against which th...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/2456/
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The World Court's emphasis on procedural rules in the recent Pulp Mills case: contributing to the progressive and coherent development of international water law
(2011)
McIntyre, Owen
The World Court's emphasis on procedural rules in the recent Pulp Mills case: contributing to the progressive and coherent development of international water law
(2011)
McIntyre, Owen
Abstract:
The judgment of the International Court of Justice in the Pulp Mills (Argentina v. Uruguay) case makes a very important contribution to international law relating to shared international water resources and to international environmental law more generally. It does much to clarify the relationship between procedural and substantive rules of international environmental law. The Court linked interstate notification of new projects to the satisfaction of the customary due diligence obligation to prevent significant transboundary harm. It found that environmental impact assessment (EIA) is an essential requirement of customary international law in respect of activities having potential transboundary effects. The real significance of the judgment is that it held that the duty to notify, and the related duty to conduct an EIA taking account of transboundary impacts, exist in customary international law and thus apply to all states, not just those that have concluded international agreemen...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1218
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Peer learning in international higher education: the experience of international students in an Irish university
(2018)
Seery, Aidan
Peer learning in international higher education: the experience of international students in an Irish university
(2018)
Seery, Aidan
Abstract:
Some of the main concerns in international higher education are the feeling of isolation among international students and their inability to adapt to the host environment, which may result in sub-optimal academic performance. Theoretically, peer learning can be an effective method to reduce these problems since it has the capacity to address isolation and adaptability issues among international students in a way that improves their learning experience and outcomes. Given the above, our study was designed to investigate this topic, focusing on the experience of international students. In this exploratory case study of a leading Irish university, we adopted a survey method via questionnaire to quantify and compare the experiences of a sample of international students at the said university. Five aspects of peer learning were explored, namely usage rate, current practices, outcomes, challenges, and coping strategies. We also included an open-ended section in the survey instrument for r...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/89655
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The domestic political roots of US perspectives on the international law on the use of force
(2020)
Connolly, Catherine
The domestic political roots of US perspectives on the international law on the use of force
(2020)
Connolly, Catherine
Abstract:
This article attempts to demonstrate the connections between US executive war powers, US interpretations of the international law on the use of force, and the history of US war-making and war-fighting, both at home and abroad. It begins by discussing the status of presidential war powers in the US domestic context, before examining the centrality of national security in US political life. In arguing that the imperial character of US international legal interpretation and defence policy changes very little between Democratic and Republican administrations, regardless of the ‘legality’ of relevant actions subject to the international law on the use of force, this paper illustrates that US ‘exceptionalism’ is situated not in a sphere outside the international rule of law, but rather in an exceptional space within an international legal system that privileges the powerful.
http://doras.dcu.ie/25300/
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Alternative Sanctions and Social Norms in International Law: The Case of Abu Ghraib
(2007)
Gopalan, Sandeep
Alternative Sanctions and Social Norms in International Law: The Case of Abu Ghraib
(2007)
Gopalan, Sandeep
Abstract:
This Article examines the use of alternative sanctions in international law using the exemplar of the abuses at Abu Ghraib. It argues that social sanctions like shaming have a powerful role to play in enforcing international law norms. When properly deployed, shaming activity by the international community can serve to influence the offending state to take corrective action and fill the enforcement gap in international law. This is the lesson from Abu Ghraib. There is evidence that the abuses so vividly depicted in the now infamous photographs were not an aberration, but had occurred for a considerable time despite complaints. It took a shaming campaign for expressions of regret and corrective action to ensue. The campaign forced U.S. citizens to come to terms with the fact that their government was acting in violation of internalized international norms (againsttorture). The coincidence of international law norms with internalized domestic norms facilitated expeditious corrective a...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/1925/
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Short-term international assignments. Military perspectives and implications for international human resource management
(2014)
Crowley-Henry, Marian; Heaslip, Graham
Short-term international assignments. Military perspectives and implications for international human resource management
(2014)
Crowley-Henry, Marian; Heaslip, Graham
Abstract:
Short-term international assignments have been under-explored in international human resource management (IHRM) literature and research. Equally, there is a dearth of studies on international mobility beyond multinational corporations. Drawing on an exploratory study of short-term international assignments in the Irish Defence Forces, this paper considers the implications for IHRM.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/12085/
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The role of the Russian Federation in the Pridnestrovian conflict: an international humanitarian law perspective
(2008)
O'Reilly, Kieran; Higgins, Noelle
The role of the Russian Federation in the Pridnestrovian conflict: an international humanitarian law perspective
(2008)
O'Reilly, Kieran; Higgins, Noelle
Abstract:
Pridnestrovie, a de facto state within the territory of the Republic of Moldova, declared itself independent in September 1990, a declaration that was followed by an armed conflict between Moldova and Pridnestrovie in 1992. To date no settlement has been achieved between the conflicting parties. The situation is complicated by the fact that the Soviet Union and subsequently the Russian Federation has been involved in the conflict in various ways. This article seeks to analyse the conflict from an international humanitarian law perspective. The involvement of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation in the conflict is of great significance because third-party involvement, depending on the level of involvement, has the potential to change the categorisation of a conflict from a non-international armed conflict to an international armed conflict. This in turn impacts on the number and nature of international humanitarian law provisions applicable to the conflict situation. As intern...
http://doras.dcu.ie/2266/
Marked
Mark
The Role of the Russian Federation in the Pridnestrovian Conflict: an International Humanitarian Law Perspective
(2008)
O'Reilly, Kieran; Higgins, Noelle
The Role of the Russian Federation in the Pridnestrovian Conflict: an International Humanitarian Law Perspective
(2008)
O'Reilly, Kieran; Higgins, Noelle
Abstract:
Pridnestrovie, a de facto state within the territory of the Republic of Moldova, declared itself independent in September 1990, a declaration that was followed by an armed conflict between Moldova and Pridnestrovie in 1992. To date no settlement has been achieved between the conflicting parties. The situation is complicated by the fact that the Soviet Union and subsequently the Russian Federation has been involved in the conflict in various ways. This article seeks to analyse the conflict from an international humanitarian law perspective. The involvement of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation in the conflict is of great significance because third-party involvement, depending on the level of involvement, has the potential to change the categorisation of a conflict from a non-international armed conflict to an international armed conflict. This in turn impacts on the number and nature of international humanitarian law provisions applicable to the conflict situation. As intern...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/12244/
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Mark
Linking academia and the ‘real world’ in International Relations
(2019)
Cottey, Andrew
Linking academia and the ‘real world’ in International Relations
(2019)
Cottey, Andrew
Abstract:
This talk will reflect on the challenges of linking academic programmes and teaching, on the one hand, with the policy-makers and practitioners, on the other, with particular reference to the discipline of international relations (which focuses on relations between states, international organisations and global political and socio-economic dynamics). The talk will draw on experience from University College Cork’s Department of Government and Politics, which has an extensive, market-leading work placement programme, and from UCC’s MSc International Public Policy and Diplomacy, which is a new model of international relations masters seeking to bridge academia and the world of policy. Our experience shows that it is possible to link academia and the world of policy and practitioners, but that it is not easy, even in an apparently very policy-oriented discipline, and that it involves significant challenges. The talk will highlight a number of challenges involved in linking the academic ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/10704
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Law as Deliberative Discourse: The Politics of International Legal Argument - Social Theory with Historical Illustrations
(2016)
Suttle, Oisin
Law as Deliberative Discourse: The Politics of International Legal Argument - Social Theory with Historical Illustrations
(2016)
Suttle, Oisin
Abstract:
In this paper I propose a novel account of international law as a subset of international political argument, in turn understood as a practice of deliberative discourse. I draw on a Habermasian communicative framework to integrate legal and political argument, facilitating a more nuanced and more plausible understanding of how international law and politics interact. Through a detailed examination of two historical cases from the first decade of the Northern Ireland conflict, involving the United Nations and the European Convention on Human Rights respectively, I illustrate three key dimensions of this framework: the relation between legal and political argument; the relation between domestic and international argument; and the distinction between strategic and communicative uses of legal argument.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/13963/
Marked
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The international context of Morocco's stalled democratization
(2005)
Cavatorta, Francesco
The international context of Morocco's stalled democratization
(2005)
Cavatorta, Francesco
Abstract:
Scholars of democratization have recently renewed their efforts to examine the influence of the international context in processes of transitions, by bridging comparative politics and international relations. This article contributes to this growing literature through an analysis of Morocco's stalled democratization in the light of its external context. International factors have been introduced in analyses of democratization only very recently and they have a structural bias. The study offers an 'agency'-based theoretical framework of understanding and uses concepts drawn from the realist theories of international relations. Two different dimensions along which countries should be analysed when examining their process of regime change are employed. The article then proceeds to examine the case of Morocco. It concludes that the international dimension crucially contributed to shape the development and the outcome of the Moroccan transition by modifying the incentive s...
http://doras.dcu.ie/474/
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The senior female international managerial career move: a qualitative study in a European context
(1998)
Linehan, Margaret
The senior female international managerial career move: a qualitative study in a European context
(1998)
Linehan, Margaret
Abstract:
Research investigating the position of women in management has, largely, been confined within national boundaries. Over the last fifteen years, empirical studies of women in international management have been undertaken, predominantly in North America. In this research field, many questions remain unanswered or have been only partially addressed. The particular focus of this study is on the senior female international managerial career move in Europe — a relatively unexplored area. Fifty senior female expatriate managers were interviewed, representing a wide range of industry and service sectors. The study, for the first time, assesses an exclusively senior sample of female managers who have made at least one international career move. This study of senior females in international management makes a theoretical contribution, not only to the analysis of gender and international human resource management, but also to wider debates within the contemporary women in management and career...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/802
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Conceptualising International Peace Mediation - Bring Back the Law
(2011)
Higgins, Noelle; Daly, Brenda
Conceptualising International Peace Mediation - Bring Back the Law
(2011)
Higgins, Noelle; Daly, Brenda
Abstract:
Mediation has been acknowledged and utilised for a number of decades as an effective method of alternative dispute resolution in a variety of areas of law, including family law, commercial law and medical law. A uniform, standardised framework exists within legal discourse which clearly identifies and categorises three main styles of mediation as facilitative, evaluative and transformative mediation. In the post-Cold War period, mediation has also emerged as an important resolution tool in armed conflict situations,2 and this type of mediation has become known as international peace mediation. However, there is significant discord within international peace mediation discourse regarding its conceptualisation and categorisation.3 This paper considers whether the extant legal framework of traditional mediation is readily applicable to international peace mediation. The paper proposes to explain how the legal framework of traditional mediation can influence the development of internati...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/5664/
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Third World Approaches to International Criminal Law
(2015)
Kiyani, Asad; Reynolds, John; Xavier, Sujith
Third World Approaches to International Criminal Law
(2015)
Kiyani, Asad; Reynolds, John; Xavier, Sujith
Abstract:
A pattern of affording impunity to local power brokers throughout Africa pervades the application of international criminal law (ICL) in Africa. The International Criminal Court (ICC) investigation into Uganda is a notorious but representative example, although similar analyses can be made of the Central African Republic, Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Libya. In Uganda, only members of the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) have been indicted for international crimes, even though the United Nations, international human rights groups, and local NGOs have documented years of abuses perpetrated by government troops and local auxiliary units, often against the same populations victimized by the LRA. The ICC is thereby implicated in the power structures and political arrangements of a repressive state that both combats the LRA and often brutalizes the civilian populations of northern Uganda. Inserting itself into Uganda, the ICC becomes a partisan player in the endg...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/11757/
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After the 8th: Ireland, Abortion, and International Law
(2019)
McMahon, Aisling; Ní Ghráinne, Bríd
After the 8th: Ireland, Abortion, and International Law
(2019)
McMahon, Aisling; Ní Ghráinne, Bríd
Abstract:
By repealing the 8th amendment, the Irish people gave its government a strong mandate to liberalize its restrictive abortion laws. In this paper, we argue that international law has a significant role to play in the drafting, interpretation and monitoring of Ireland’s future proposed abortion law framework. We explore the relationship between international and domestic law, and argue that there are three key roles for international law in the current abortion context, namely: (1) ensuring at a minimum that new abortion laws are drafted in a way which respects Ireland’s international law obligations; (2) ensuring that laws are interpreted and implemented in a way which facilitates practical and effective access to abortion, and (3) providing avenues to challenge obstacles to securing legally available abortion services in Ireland. In making these arguments, we acknowledge that although Ireland is party to a variety of international law treaties which set out obligations in respect of...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/10586/
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International criminal law and the role of non-state actors in preserving open source evidence
(2018)
Costello, Róisín Áine
International criminal law and the role of non-state actors in preserving open source evidence
(2018)
Costello, Róisín Áine
Abstract:
This article analyses the current duties of non-state actors, specifically digital platform providers, to preserve and report content useful in the later prosecution of international criminal offences. The article illustrates the shortcomings of current legal mechanisms both at an international and national level by which such duties to preserve and/or report are imposed and proposes solutions that countenance a more developed role for the International Criminal Court in collecting and preserving open-source evidence independent of non-state actor cooperation.
http://doras.dcu.ie/25484/
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The aftermath of 11 September: increasing international insecurity
(2002)
Connolly, Eileen; Doyle, John
The aftermath of 11 September: increasing international insecurity
(2002)
Connolly, Eileen; Doyle, John
Abstract:
Since the attacks of 11 September 2001 the US has chosen a strongly unilateral foreign policy underscored and effectively sustained by military power. In the immediate aftermath it was speculated that US desire to build an international coalition against terrorism and to take military action in sensitive areas would lead it to engage in dialogue with its potential allies in both the developed and developing worlds. This did not prove to be the case as the US has continued to act in opposition to the international community and to back up its foreign policy decisions with force if necessary. This article analyses the current international role of the US and the impact its actions have on the emerging system of international governance.
http://doras.dcu.ie/654/
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First landmines, now small arms?: the international campaign to ban landmines as a model for small-arms advocacy
(2006)
O'Dwyer, Diana
First landmines, now small arms?: the international campaign to ban landmines as a model for small-arms advocacy
(2006)
O'Dwyer, Diana
Abstract:
This paper is a comparative analysis of the international campaigns around landmines and small arms. The aim is to determine whether aspects of the successful campaign to ban landmines can be replicated by non-governmental organisations (NGOs) campaigning on other issues, such as the regulation of small arms. Drawing on the literature on globalisation, transnational civil society, social movements, global governance and international norms, five main factors influencing the success of the landmines campaign are identified and applied to the small-arms campaign. These include geopolitical conditions, the effects of globalisation, the attitude of other actors in the international system, how campaigners framed the issue and how they linked it to pre-existing norms and legal precedents. The paper concludes that the landmines campaign is best regarded as a one-off success, resulting from a particular coincidence of issue-specific factors and external conditions, which cannot easily be r...
http://doras.dcu.ie/14995/
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A case study of the televised international newsflow of Raidió Teilifís Éireann and The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: A comparative content analysis
(2012)
Testar, Jason Thomas
A case study of the televised international newsflow of Raidió Teilifís Éireann and The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: A comparative content analysis
(2012)
Testar, Jason Thomas
Abstract:
The objective of this comparative newsflow study was to analyse the televised international news broadcast in the national public service of Canada and the Republic of Ireland over a thirty-day term. In doing so, a quantitative content analysis comparing the output of two national public service providers (PSB), Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) is offered. In identifying the national origin of the international news, those reports utilizing the foreign correspondents of the PSBs were quantified. Finally, the ratio of international to domestic reportage and the volume of international news reports by quantity and duration are also compared. This study reviews the literature of cultural, corporate and state sovereignty as it looks to the regulatory structures of the broadcasters. Gatekeeping dynamics and the critical media ecology of a re-feudalizing public sphere are addressed as are the roles of framing and domestication. An exploration ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/17449/
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Persistent puzzles in international finance and economics
(2004)
Aggarwal, Raj
Persistent puzzles in international finance and economics
(2004)
Aggarwal, Raj
Abstract:
As the title of this lecture suggests, I plan to talk about selected puzzles in international finance and economics. These puzzles include deviations from theoretical values that are observed in spot and forward markets in foreign exchange. Also, observed currency values persistently deviate from purchasing power and interest rate parities. Further, there is also an unexplained large home bias against international portfolio diversification, and there are frequent unexpected crashes and crises in international financial markets. These puzzles are interesting because they have not been eliminated by traders nor explained away satisfactorily by economists ? indeed their persistence challenge and intrigue us.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/60363
Marked
Mark
Politics, path dependence and public goods: the case of international container ports
(2014)
Hiney, Joseph
Politics, path dependence and public goods: the case of international container ports
(2014)
Hiney, Joseph
Abstract:
Globalisation, in the liberal paradigm, implies a trend towards common practices in political, cultural, and economic activities. Scholars disagree on whether we are observing the evolution of an international society, albeit richly diverse, or resilience in nationalist ideas that result in significantly diverse units within an international system. This thesis approaches this broad question from a comparative political economy perspective focussed on a segment of the international maritime trade market. Amidst the political rhetoric of „selling the family silver‟ and „loss of sovereignty‟ to the market there are observable policy differences across nations, between sectors and between levels of the economy. The differences are also observable over time. Container ports are uniquely suited to understand the comparative political economy of policy change because they are at the intersection between the international forces of globalisation pulling one way, and the domestic forces su...
http://doras.dcu.ie/20064/
Marked
Mark
Imputed Criminal Liability and the Goals of International Justice
(2011)
Darcy, Shane
Imputed Criminal Liability and the Goals of International Justice
(2011)
Darcy, Shane
Abstract:
This article considers the suitability of employing particular modes of imputed criminal liability in trials before international criminal tribunals. It focuses specifically on the doctrines of joint criminal enterprise and superior responsibility, two forms of liability which are central to many contemporary international criminal proceedings. Both doctrines can involve a broad form of criminal liability which may not be entirely appropriate when one considers the context in which such trials take place and the significance which often attaches to them. Proponents of international justice have contended that the contribution of these trials goes beyond basic accountability and providing justice for victims, extending also to peacemaking, reconciliation, deterrence, and the creation of a historical record. This article queries whether aspects of joint criminal enterprise liability and superior responsibility are appropriate when international justice is viewed in this light.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2142
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