International Law and the Post–Soviet Space II – Essays on Ukraine, Intervention, and Non–Proliferation

Author:   Thomas D. Grant ,  Stephen M. Schwebel
Publisher:   ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Christian Schon
ISBN:  

9783838212807


Pages:   440
Publication Date:   08 December 2021
Format:   Paperback
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International Law and the Post–Soviet Space II – Essays on Ukraine, Intervention, and Non–Proliferation


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This volume deals with legal issues concerning Russia's annexation of Crimea and intervention in the Donbas, so-called 'frozen conflicts' and 'hybrid warfare,' the use of courts and tribunals to address armed aggression, and the implications of recent events for the security guarantees connected to nuclear nonproliferation. Continuing from the first volume, which contains Parts One and Two on Chechnya and the Baltic States, this book is comprised of Part Three-Ukraine and other Successor States: Territorial Integrity and its Challengers in the Post-Soviet Space; Part Four-Intervention and International Law; Part Five-Legal Proceedings and Unlawful Claims; and Part Six-Non-Proliferation after Budapest.

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Author:   Thomas D. Grant ,  Stephen M. Schwebel
Publisher:   ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Christian Schon
Imprint:   ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Christian Schon
Weight:   0.666kg
ISBN:  

9783838212807


ISBN 10:   3838212800
Pages:   440
Publication Date:   08 December 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

The expertise of Tom Grant regarding international law and the post-Soviet space is perfectly reflected in the present book collecting his main writings on the most topical and contemporary issues of that region. This is a definite must-read for anyone interested in grasping the intricacies of how international law is attempting to play its role in this particular region.--Julien Fouret, international dispute resolution specialist, BETTO SERAGLINI (Paris) Tom Grant's thoughtful writings address head-on one of the most intractable questions posed by international law: How to apply the standards governing the behavior of states to a state that refuses to adjust its behavior to those standards. In a fascinating series of studies of the legal issues presented by the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Grant ably traces the behavior of the Russian Federation as it seeks to reestablish the domination of adjacent territory achieved by the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire before it, and demonstrates chillingly how the Russian Federation has managed to skirt or to defy the norms of international law in each instance.--John M. Townsend, Partner and Co-chair, Arbitration Practice Group, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP Tom Grant takes a generalist international lawyer's perspective to what he calls the post-Soviet space. The stellar quality of his argument will make this collection of considerable interest to generalists and indispensable to those academics and practitioners that engage with international legal issues in relation to the region.--Martins Paparinskis, Reader in Public International Law, University College London [A] timely and important contribution . . . on burning international law issues in the ex-USSR territory . . . Grant's work shows that rules of international law offer a frame for the examination of the many problems, sometimes they may suggest the possible solutions, and certainly they keep the disputes alive.--Judge Ineta Ziemele, President of the Constitutional Court of Latvia The post-Soviet space is where assumptions about . . . the emergence of an international rules-based order are being tested and assessed. These volumes, collecting in one place works of Thomas Grant [relating] to questions such as self-determination and territorial integrity, provide an important look at how the decades following the collapse of the USSR . . . will shape the international environment of the mid-twenty-first century.--Nikolas Gvosdev, senior fellow, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs Thomas D. Grant's impressive International Law in the Post-Soviet Space provides by far the most exhaustive discussion of the most important international legal problems that arose from the dramatic days of the collapse of the USSR. Chechnya, Ukraine, the Baltic States, the actions taken and the legal positions expressed by Russia at home and in its neighboring areas are treated here in detail, highlighting their significance also for the further development of international law. This is an intelligent, carefully and realistically crafted discussion that is full of factual detail and expos s of the positions of the protagonists in disputes many of which continue to the present day. International lawyers ought to be immensely grateful for the wealth of materials and arguments they will receive from this welcome work.--Martti Koskenniemi, Professor of International Law, University of Helsinki and author of Russian Approaches to International Law


Tom Grant takes a generalist international lawyer's perspective to what he calls the post-Soviet space. The stellar quality of his argument will make this collection of considerable interest to generalists and indispensable to those academics and practitioners that engage with international legal issues in relation to the region.--Martins Paparinskis, Reader in Public International Law, University College London Tom Grant's thoughtful writings address head-on one of the most intractable questions posed by international law: How to apply the standards governing the behavior of states to a state that refuses to adjust its behavior to those standards. In a fascinating series of studies of the legal issues presented by the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Grant ably traces the behavior of the Russian Federation as it seeks to reestablish the domination of adjacent territory achieved by the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire before it, and demonstrates chillingly how the Russian Federation has managed to skirt or to defy the norms of international law in each instance.--John M. Townsend, Partner and Co-chair, Arbitration Practice Group, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP The expertise of Tom Grant regarding international law and the post-Soviet space is perfectly reflected in the present book collecting his main writings on the most topical and contemporary issues of that region. This is a definite must-read for anyone interested in grasping the intricacies of how international law is attempting to play its role in this particular region.--Julien Fouret, international dispute resolution specialist, BETTO SERAGLINI (Paris)


Tom Grant takes a generalist international lawyer's perspective to what he calls the post-Soviet space. The stellar quality of his argument will make this collection of considerable interest to generalists and indispensable to those academics and practitioners that engage with international legal issues in relation to the region.--Martins Paparinskis, Reader in Public International Law, University College London The expertise of Tom Grant regarding international law and the post-Soviet space is perfectly reflected in the present book collecting his main writings on the most topical and contemporary issues of that region. This is a definite must-read for anyone interested in grasping the intricacies of how international law is attempting to play its role in this particular region.--Julien Fouret, international dispute resolution specialist, BETTO SERAGLINI (Paris) Tom Grant's thoughtful writings address head-on one of the most intractable questions posed by international law: How to apply the standards governing the behavior of states to a state that refuses to adjust its behavior to those standards. In a fascinating series of studies of the legal issues presented by the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Grant ably traces the behavior of the Russian Federation as it seeks to reestablish the domination of adjacent territory achieved by the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire before it, and demonstrates chillingly how the Russian Federation has managed to skirt or to defy the norms of international law in each instance.--John M. Townsend, Partner and Co-chair, Arbitration Practice Group, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP


Tom Grant takes a generalist international lawyer's perspective to what he calls the post-Soviet space. The stellar quality of his argument will make this collection of considerable interest to generalists and indispensable to those academics and practitioners that engage with international legal issues in relation to the region.--Martins Paparinskis, Reader in Public International Law, University College London The expertise of Tom Grant regarding international law and the post-Soviet space is perfectly reflected in the present book collecting his main writings on the most topical and contemporary issues of that region. This is a definite must-read for anyone interested in grasping the intricacies of how international law is attempting to play its role in this particular region.--Julien Fouret, international dispute resolution specialist, BETTO SERAGLINI (Paris) Tom Grant's thoughtful writings address head-on one of the most intractable questions posed by international law: How to apply the standards governing the behavior of states to a state that refuses to adjust its behavior to those standards. In a fascinating series of studies of the legal issues presented by the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Grant ably traces the behavior of the Russian Federation as it seeks to reestablish the domination of adjacent territory achieved by the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire before it, and demonstrates chillingly how the Russian Federation has managed to skirt or to defy the norms of international law in each instance.--John M. Townsend, Partner and Co-chair, Arbitration Practice Group, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP [A] timely and important contribution . . . on burning international law issues in the ex-USSR territory . . . Grant's work shows that rules of international law offer a frame for the examination of the many problems, sometimes they may suggest the possible solutions, and certainly they keep the disputes alive.--Judge Ineta Ziemele, President of the Constitutional Court of Latvia The post-Soviet space is where assumptions about . . . the emergence of an international rules-based order are being tested and assessed. These volumes, collecting in one place works of Thomas Grant [relating] to questions such as self-determination and territorial integrity, provide an important look at how the decades following the collapse of the USSR . . . will shape the international environment of the mid-twenty-first century.--Nikolas Gvosdev, senior fellow, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs Thomas D. Grant's impressive International Law in the Post-Soviet Space provides by far the most exhaustive discussion of the most important international legal problems that arose from the dramatic days of the collapse of the USSR. Chechnya, Ukraine, the Baltic States, the actions taken and the legal positions expressed by Russia at home and in its neighboring areas are treated here in detail, highlighting their significance also for the further development of international law. This is an intelligent, carefully and realistically crafted discussion that is full of factual detail and expos s of the positions of the protagonists in disputes many of which continue to the present day. International lawyers ought to be immensely grateful for the wealth of materials and arguments they will receive from this welcome work.--Martti Koskenniemi, Professor of International Law, University of Helsinki and author of Russian Approaches to International Law


Author Information

"""Dr Thomas D. Grant studied history and law at Harvard, Yale, and Cambridge. He has been an academic visitor at Heidelberg and Stanford and was a junior research fellow at Oxford. Since 2002, Grant has been a Fellow of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law and Wolfson College, University of Cambridge. He is the author of, among other books, Aggression against Ukraine (Palgrave Macmillan 2015). Grant has published in a range of academic journals, including the American Journal of International Law, German Yearbook of International Law, and Polish Yearbook of International Law; is a contributing author of the Max-Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law, and a founding editor of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement. He is the editor for recognition of states and state succession, among other topics, in the forthcoming 10th edition of Oppenheims International Law (Oxford University Press). He acts as counsel, expert, and advisor before the International Court of Justice, investment tribunals, and national courts."

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