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The Changing Nature of International Law in the Twenty-First Century draws together contributions of leading international legal scholars respecting major themes of the future of international law in the new century. The papers have been collected in honour of the late Professor Kenneth R. Simmonds, former Director of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law and Professor of Law at Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London. The book is divided into three parts: Public International Law, International Dispute Resolution, and European and Other Regional Integration, which constitute the important themes and currents in international law today and in the future. The sections also represent the areas that were of personal interest to Professor Simmonds and in which he was a leading contributor until his death. This book will be of prime interest to international legal scholars or legal practitioners interested in the specific themes addressed within the volume.
Judged against any criteria, the International Maritime Organization must be regarded as one of the most efficient, dedicated and productive of the specialised Agencies of the United Nations Organisation.
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An introductory commentary reviewing the the debate and nature of the challenges to the Antarctic Treatry System (ATS) signed in Washington, 1959. The challenges crystallised as a result of the signing at Wellington, New Zealand, on 25 Nov. 1988, of the Convention on the Regulation of Antarctic Mineral Resource Activities (CRAMRA) and the signing in Madrid, on 4 Oct. 1991, of the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty.