Abstract
International sanctions, understood as coercive means imposed by the United Nations, or by States, individually or collectively, against a country responsible for violating fundamental rules of international law, have been extensively analysed in the legal literature.1 A survey of such literature shows that particular emphasis has been put on the nature of sanctions, their status in international law and the very controversial issue of the legality of their adoption either by regional organisations, or by a State motu proprio, unilaterally.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,Political Science and International Relations
Reference100 articles.
1. As rightly pointed out by Canor, op. cit. supra n.12, p.161.
2. S.I. 1992 No.1302.
3. Vedder C. and Folz H.-P. (1998) 35 C.M.L.Rev. 209.
4. Tesauro G. Diritto Comunitario (1995), pp.107–119
5. S.I. 1990 No.1651.
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