Product details
- Categories: Governance & Politics, International Organisations
- Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- ISBN: 9781107439719
- Publication Date: 01/04/2015
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 424
- Language: English
Summary
The third edition of this market leading textbook (previously called An Introduction to International Institutional Law) is written in a clear, three-part structure. It is centred on the dynamics of the relationships between international organisations and their organs, staff, and the outside world. It discusses the essential topics of the law of international organisations, including powers, finances, and privileges and immunities, as well as membership rules, institutional structures, and accountability. The newly revised text has been updated extensively to reflect the entry into force of the EU's Lisbon Treaty (and Croatia's accession) and new articles on the responsibility of international organisations. The chapters have also been reorganised for further clarity. Two new chapters, on the international civil service and the relations between organisations and other institutions, respectively, have been added.
- Material has been reorganised into a clear three-part structure
- Updates include the addition of new case law, the inclusion of the EU's Lisbon Treaty (and Croatia's accession) and the adoption of articles on the responsibility of international organisations
- Two new chapters cover the international civil service and relations between organisations and other institutions, respectively
Table of contents
1. Introduction
2. The rise of international organisations
Part I. Member States and International Organisations:
3. The legal position of international organisations
4. International organisations and the law of treaties
5. Issues of membership
6. Financing
7. Privileges and immunities
8. Legal instruments
9. Dissolution and succession
Part II. Internal Relations:
10. Institutional structures
11. The bureaucracy
Part III. External Relations:
12. Treaty-making by international organisations
13. Organisational liaisons
14. Issues of responsibility
15. Concluding remarks.