The region that once comprised the Soviet Union has been the scene of crises with serious implications for international law. Some of these, like the separatist conflict in Chechnya, date to the time of the dissolution of the USSR. Others, like Russia’s forcible annexation of Crimea and intervention in Ukraine’s Donbas, erupted years later. The seizure of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which took place long before, would trouble Soviet-western relations for the Cold War’s duration and gained new relevance when the Baltic States re-emerged in the 1990s. The fate of Ukraine notwithstanding, the Budapest Memorandum of 1994 complicates future efforts at nuclear non-proliferation. Legal proceedings in connection with events in the post-Soviet space brought before the International Court of Justice and under investment treaties or the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea may be steps toward the resolution of recent crises—or tests of the resiliency of modern international law.
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Thomas D Grant
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Stephen M Schwebel
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Delivery time
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Delivery time 2-3 working days.
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| Foreword by | Stephen M Schwebel |
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Number of Pages |
440
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e-book DRM |
Digital Rights Management - Watermark
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Type |
E-Book
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Publication date |
30.04.2019
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E-book format |
PDF
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Language |
English
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ISBN
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978-3-8382-7279-5
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Product safety information (EU GPSR)
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“Grant’s two volumes help fill the gap in the international-law literature in grappling with the pressing legal and political issues in the region.” –The Russian Review, Vol.79, No.2
"The book is valuable for anyone wishing to obtain a conventional view of international legal questions surrounding these post-Soviet regions. It is safe to trust Grant’s dogmatic arguments and his thorough grasp of historical detail. […] While more critical interrogations may have enriched the book, their absence does not spoil Thomas D. Grant’s flawless analyses of international law regarding the legal status of Chechnya and the Baltic states across time."—Andreas Pacher, Europe-Asia Studies, 72:10