The Law of the United Nations

The Law of the United Nations

Author: Hans Kelsen

Publisher: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 1012

ISBN-13: 1584770775

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Kelsen, Hans. The Law of the United Nations. A Critical Analysis of Its Fundamental Problems. New York: Frederick A. Praeger, [1964]. xvii, 994 pp. Reprinted 2000 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN-13: 978-1-58477-077-0. ISBN-10: 1-58477-077-5. Cloth. $125.* First published under the auspices of The London Institute of World Affairs in 1950. With a supplement, Recent Trends in the Law of the United Nations [1951]. A critical, detailed, highly technical legal analysis of the United Nations charter and organization.


The Internal Justice of the United Nations

The Internal Justice of the United Nations

Author: Abdelaziz Megzari

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2015-08-17

Total Pages: 601

ISBN-13: 9004301860

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Since 1945, the United Nations has had an internal justice system to handle internal disputes and examine employee conformity with its rules of governance. Based on an exhaustive analysis of 3,067 judgements, advisory opinions, and General Assembly debates on the issue, The Internal Justice of the United Nations offers an unparalleled account of the system’s effectiveness and shortcomings over its seventy year history.


The Legal Status, Privileges and Immunities of the Specialized Agencies of the United Nations and Certain Other International Organizations

The Legal Status, Privileges and Immunities of the Specialized Agencies of the United Nations and Certain Other International Organizations

Author: Kuljit Ahluwalia

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13: 9401509891

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The past century has been a period of revolutionary change in many fields of human activity, in institutions and in thought. This period has seen the need of adjustment of state institutions and legal concepts to the needs of greater international cooperation. During the half century preceding the First World War, cooperation by governments outside the traditional diplomatic channels and procedures was largely limited to highly technical organizations, commonly referred to as public international unions, dealing with such matters as the im provement of postal communications and the control of contagious diseases. With the establishment of the League of Nations and the International Labor Organization at the end of the First World War, organized international cooperation assumed greater importance and the need was recognized of giving to the instruments of such cooper ation legal status and rights which would facilitate the effective performance of their functions. This proved to be a difficult adjustment for legal theory to make since the enjoyment of special privileges and immunities had been based in traditional international law on the fiction of state sovereignty. The new international organizations, while performing functions of the kind performed by national govern ments, were far from possessing the powers of such governments. The failure of the League of Nations to achieve its major purpose did not signify any permanent decline in the role of organized inter national cooperation.