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详细
What legal principles govern the external exercise of the public power of states within common law legal systems? Foreign Relations Law tackles three fundamental issues: the distribution of the foreign relations power between the organs of government; the impact of the foreign relations power on individual rights; and the treatment of the foreign state within the municipal legal system. Focusing on the four Anglo-Commonwealth states (the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand), McLachlan examines the interaction between public international law and national law and demonstrates that the prime function of foreign relations law is not to exclude foreign affairs from legal regulation, but to allocate jurisdiction and determine applicable law in cases involving the external exercise of the public power of states: between the organs of the state; amongst the national legal systems of different states; and between the national and the international legal systems.
• First comprehensive study of foreign relations law in Anglo-Commonwealth systems in three decades • Presents an original methodology for analysing foreign relations law problems which shows how doctrines such as jurisdiction, justiciability, act of state and immunity perform an allocative function • Written and presented in a lucid and easy-to-use style, supported by comprehensive tables, and fully cross-referenced to the International Law Reports for use by an international audience
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Part I. Sources: 1. Function; 2. Development; 3. Interaction between international and national law; Part II. The Foreign Relations Power: 4. Executive; 5. Legislature; 6. Judiciary; Part III. Foreign Relations and the Individual: 7. Civil claims against the State; 8. Human rights claims; 9. Diplomatic protection; Part IV. The Foreign State: 10. Personality and representation; 11. The claimant State; 12. The defendant State.
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Campbell McLachlan, Victoria University of Wellington
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Advance praise: 'Questions concerning the role of international law before national courts are confronting the courts with constitutional problems as profound as any that have arisen during the past 200 years. This masterly study, by an eminent practitioner and academic, offers both an incisive analysis of the problems and a subtle and precise approach to a solution based upon the methodologies of private international law. It is an outstanding study, carrying the torch of Hersch Lauterpacht and Francis Mann into a new century and a very different world.' Vaughan Lowe, QC, Emeritus Chichele Professor of Public International Law, University of Oxford