Implementation of International Law in the United States
					
	
		©2010
		Monographs
		
			
				
				310 Pages
			
		
	
				
				
					
						
					
				
				
				
					
						Series: 
	
		
			
				Rechtspolitisches Symposium / Legal Policy Symposium, Volume 9
			
		
	
					
				
				
			Summary
			
				Even though the Constitution proclaims treaties entered into by the United States to be part of the supreme law of the land and authorises prosecution of offences against the law of nation in federal courts, the United States has had a checkered record in ratifying human rights instruments, in upholding decisions of international tribunals, and indeed in submitting itself to the jurisdiction of such tribunals. It refused to uphold judgments of the International Court of Justice within its municipal legal system, terminated the competence of the ICJ to adjudicate international disputes to which it is a party, and attempted to undermine the functioning of the international criminal court. It engaged in armed conflicts in blatant violation of international humanitarian law and subjected belligerent detainees to unbecoming interrogation techniques. There are clear indications that the Obama administration is setting the United States on a new course of international comity and Völkerrechtsfreundlichkeit.
			
		
	Details
- Pages
 - 310
 - Publication Year
 - 2010
 - ISBN (Hardcover)
 - 9783631598801
 - ISBN (PDF)
 - 9783653001341
 - DOI
 - 10.3726/978-3-653-00134-1
 - Language
 - English
 - Publication date
 - 2010 (November)
 - Keywords
 - american foreign policy juvenile justice system rights of the child international criminal court
 - Published
 - Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2010. 309 pp.
 - Product Safety
 - Peter Lang Group AG