Sunday, January 21, 2018

Sobenes Obregon & Samson: Nicaragua Before the International Court of Justice: Impacts on International Law

Edgardo Sobenes Obregon (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Nicaragua) & Benjamin Samson (Université Paris Nanterre) have published Nicaragua Before the International Court of Justice: Impacts on International Law (Springer 2018). Contents includes:
  • Mohammed Bedjaoui, Introduction from the Bench
  • Alain Pellet, Introduction from the Podium
  • Paul S. Reichler & Yuri B. Parkhomenko, Nicaragua v. United States and Matters of Evidence Before the International Court of Justice
  • Fernando Lusa Bordin, The Nicaragua v. United States Case: An Overview of the Epochal Judgments
  • Daniel Müller, The Saga of the 1858 Treaty of Limits: The Cases Against Costa Rica
  • Lawrence H. Martin & Yuri B. Parkhomenko, The Territorial and Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia) and Its Implications for Future Maritime Delimitations in the Caribbean Sea and Elsewhere
  • Antonio Remiro Brotóns, The Pact of Bogotá in the Jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice
  • Brian McGarry, Nicaragua’s Impacts on Optional Clause Practice
  • Antonios Tzanakopoulos & Anna Ventouratou, Nicaragua in the International Court of Justice and the Law of Treaties
  • Malgosia Fitzmaurice, Customary Law, General Principles, Unilateral Acts
  • Vaughan Lowe, Customary Principle of Sovereignty of States in the Nicaragua Case
  • Benjamin Samson & Tessa Barsac, The Law of State Responsibility in the Nicaraguan Cases
  • William Schabas, The Use of Force in the Nicaraguan Cases
  • Donald R. Rothwell, International Law of the Sea and the Nicaraguan Cases
  • Alina Miron, Intervention
  • Hugh Thirlway, Provisional Measures
  • Edgardo Sobenes Obregon, Joinder of Cases: Strengthening the Sound Administration of Justice and the Judicial Economy
  • Pierre d’Argent, Conclusions