Essays about: "charter change"

Showing result 1 - 5 of 25 essays containing the words charter change.

  1. 1. Justifying or Excusing Humanitarian Intervention? - An Examination of Whether the Law of State Responsibility Can Accommodate the Domestic Justification-Excuse Distinction

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakulteten

    Author : Isabella Krvavac; [2022]
    Keywords : Folkrätt; public international law; analogi; analogy; rättfärdigande omständigheter; justifications; ursäktande omständigheter; excuses; humanitär intervention; humanitarian intervention; Law and Political Science;

    Abstract : In defense of humanitarian intervention, it has been claimed to be ‘illegal but justified’ and ‘illegal but excused’. One way of understanding such claims is that humanitarian intervention is illegal since existing primary rules of international law prohibit such intervention. READ MORE

  2. 2. Privacy risks caused by the Swedish Police use of IMSI-catchers in a democratic society

    University essay from Högskolan i Skövde/Institutionen för informationsteknologi

    Author : Karl Martin Stawe; [2021]
    Keywords : ;

    Abstract : For over a decade, the Swedish government has debated the Swedish Police Authority, starting now, the Swedish Police, usage of IMSI-catchers, without finding a solution that provides a formal statute that balances crime-fighting and caring for a natural person's integrity. By IMSI-catchers, the author of this paper refers to the man-in-the-middle attack device that, among other things, can listen to SMS and phone calls in plaintext. READ MORE

  3. 3. “New” Sustainable Peacebuilding? - A Critical Examination of the United Nations Change in Peacebuilding Approach

    University essay from Malmö universitet/Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS)

    Author : Marcus Lindh; [2020]
    Keywords : Peacebuilding; Sustainable Peace; United Nations; Liberal Peace; Critical Peacebuilding; Scandinavian Peace Theory;

    Abstract : Building peace and preventing the emergence of new and existing conflicts is one of the fundamental objectives of the United Nations, seen as deep down as in the charter of the organization. As the United Nations has existed for some time their peacebuilding framework has changed on several occasions, with the most recent change taking place in 2016. READ MORE

  4. 4. Sharing is Caring : An Examination of the Essential Facilities Doctrine and its Applicability to Big Data

    University essay from Uppsala universitet/Juridiska institutionen

    Author : Hedda Berto; [2020]
    Keywords : Essential facilities; Competition; Big Data; Article 102 TFEU; Abuse; Dominance; European Union; Privacy; Consumer harm;

    Abstract : Since the internet revolution, and with the ever-growing presence of the internet in our everyday lives, being able to control as much data as possible has become an indispensable part of any business looking to succeed on digital markets. This is where Big Data has become crucial. READ MORE

  5. 5. A paradigm shift from voluntary to court-ordered climate change mitigation? The potentials and challenges of a human rights-based approach

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakulteten

    Author : Kimberly de Bruijn; [2020]
    Keywords : international human rights law; public international law; climate change; climate change mitigation; public interest litigation; actio popularis; human rights approach; united nations framework convention on climate change; paris agreement; rule of law; democracy; right to life; right to respect for private and family life; european convention on human rights; african charter on human and peoples rights; american convention on human rights; right to a healthy environment; environmental law; united nations; Law and Political Science;

    Abstract : The central theme of this thesis is anthropogenic climate change; governments' inability to create an effective, inclusive response mechanism that manages to mitigate anthropogenic emissions; and advocates efforts to coerce States to act by invoking State responsibility in adjudicatory dispute settlement processes. States' failure to act in accordance with scientific risk assessments and to mitigate polluting activities has led underrepresented groups to increasingly lose trust in their respective executive and legislative branches, and, by means of protest, these advocates are now turning to court. READ MORE