Description
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Economic Sanctions and International Law_2016 by Edited by Professor Matthew Happold Edited by Paul Eden
In recent years sanctions have become an increasingly popular tool of foreign policy not only at the multilateral level (at the UN) but also regionally (the EU in particular) and unilaterally. The nature of measures imposed has also changed: from comprehensive sanctions regimes (discredited since Iraq in the 1990s) to ‘targeted’ or ‘smart’ sanctions directed at specific individuals or entities (through asset freezes and travel bans) or prohibiting particular activities (arms embargoes and export prohibitions). Bringing together scholars government and private practitioners iEconomic Sanctions and International Law /iprovides an overview of recent developments and an analysis of the problems that they have engendered. Chapters examine the contemporary practice of the various actors and the legality (or otherwise) of their activities. Issues considered include the human rights of persons targeted and the mechanisms established to challenge their listing; as well as in cases of sanctions imposed by regional organisations and individual states the rights of third States and their nationals. The book will be of interest to scholars and practitioners of international law and politics.