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Non-state actors as new subjects of international law : international law - from the traditional state order towards the law of the global community : proceedings of an international symposium of the Kiel Walther-Schücking-Institute of International Law, March 25 to 28, 1998
Ort / Verlag
Berlin, Germany : Duncker & Humblot,
Erscheinungsjahr
1999
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Description based upon print version of record.
Contents; Jost Delbrück: Opening Address; Rainer Hofmann: Opening Address; Ralf Stegner: Opening Address; Ruth Wedgwood: Legal Personality and the Role of Non-Governmental Organizations and Non- State Political Entities in the United Nations System; Daniel Thürer: The Emergence of Non-Governmental Organizations and Transnational Enterprises in International Law and the Changing Role of the State; Discussion; Thomas M. Franck: Individuals and Groups of Individuals as Subjects of International Law
Stephan Hobe: Individuals and Groups as Global Actors: The Denationalization of International TransactionsDiscussion; List of Participants
Traditionally, the only recognized subjects of public international law have been states and intergovernmental organizations. In light of the gradually changing role of the state as a consequence of the increasing process of globalization, there appears to be a growing tendency to involve non-state actors, such as non-governmental and para-governmental organizations, multinational enterprises, individuals and groups of individuals (e.g. minorities), as participants in the international law-making process. Is public international law, thus, showing a tendency to extend the number of its recogni