
International Law and the Adjudication of Territorial Disputes
by Plant, Brendan-
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Summary
This book seeks to clarify the content, character and legal significance of the principle of effectiveness in the international law of territory. By surveying the diplomatic practice and reviewing the extensive international case law, it demonstrates that effectiveness remains a vital element of the international law of territory, though its meaning has evolved and its functions have multiplied. It also shows that, while effectivites have become a ubiquitous element in modern territorial litigation, their treatment has been far from uniform. Through a systematic analysis of the various ways in which effectivites have been used in territorial disputes, this book reveals the dynamic and complex manner in which the principle of effectiveness interacts with other shifting elements of international law concerning territory, including the prohibition on the use of force, uti possidetis, the law of treaties, inter-temporality and the critical date, self-determination and international legal personality. With its distinctive analysis of the theoretical debates, historical practice and modern case law, this book sheds new light on the adjudication of disputes over territorial sovereignty and land boundaries today.
Author Biography
Brendan Plant, College Lecturer and Fellow, Wolfson College, University of Cambridge
Dr Brendan Plant is Hopkins-Parry Fellow and Director of Studies in Law at Downing College, Cambridge and Associate Fellow of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law at the University of Cambridge. He is also an External Professor of the Universidad de La Sabana in Bogota, Chile, and a Summer Faculty Member of the University of Mississippi School of Law. Dr Plant is also an academic member of Blackstone Chambers in London.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Historical Development of the International Rules Concerning Territory
3. Doctrinal Dissatisfaction and Development in the Twentieth Century
4. The Multiple Uses of Effectivites in Modern Territorial Disputes
5. Conclusion
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