Public International Law

Code Cours
2324-ESPOL-ITLAW-EN-3002
Langue d'enseignement
FR, EN
Ce cours apparaît dans les formation(s) suivante(s)
Responsable(s)
SARA DEZALAY
Période

Présentation

Objectifs

The course aims to provide students with a basic understanding of the logics and main principles of public international law. International law, as its name indicates, is the law that applies in the relations between (inter-) States (-‘nation’). It is therefore not a branch of domestic law – like commercial, constitutional or yet family law – and, indeed, differs from it in many ways. Its main characteristic probably lies in the fact that the international legal order lacks a single central authority capable of ensuring universal respect for rules. It operates in a horizontal rather than vertical fashion. As a result, not only are States the main subjects of international law, but also its main guardians. This seemingly paradoxical situation is the source of most of the particularities that surround the making, the practice as well as the logics of international law. The course will seek to familiarize students with these particularities and with the content of the most important rules of international law. The purpose is to make sure that they acquire the necessary (legal) tools to critically assess and analyse how the international (legal) system works.


Présentation



Session 1 - 12 September 2023 – 12-2pm:


· Course introduction


· Welcome quiz


· What is international law?


Part 1. International law in a changing world


Session 2 - 19 September 2023 – 12-2pm:


· Is international law really “law”?


· Is international law really “international”?


Part 2. The sources of international law


Session 3 - 26 September 2023 – 12-2pm:


· Why do the sources of international law matter?


· Traditional and contemporary sources of international law


Part 3. The subjects of international law


Session 4 – 3 October 2023 – 12-2pm:


· States


· The Right of all peoples to self-determination


· Individuals


· International organizations



Part 4. International law and the use of force by states


Session 5 - 10 October 2023 - 12-2pm:


· From the “just war” to the United Nations


· Interventions


· Terrorism and international law


· Cyber warfare



Part 5. International law and protection


Session 6 – 24 October 2023 - 12-2 pm:


· Development and scope of protection of international humanitarian law


· The nature and development of international human rights law



Part 6. International law and responsibility


Session 7 – 7 November 2023 - 12-2 pm:


· State responsibility


· The treatment of aliens


· The protection of foreign property and investments



Session 8 – 14 November 2023 – 12-2 pm:


· Individual criminal responsibility


· International criminal courts and tribunals



Conclusion


Session 9 - 21 November 2023 - 11am-1pm:


· Conclusion of the course


· Exam tips

Modalités

Modalités d'enseignement

The course will try, as much as possible, to draw illustration from current international events and push students to use the rules and principles of law expounded during the course to analyse them. Although it will take a classic ex-cathedra form the classes will try, as much as possible, to open space up for discussion and debate.

Power-points for each lecture, including recommended readings, will be posted on i-Campus.

The evaluation will take the form of a written exam (100% of the final grade). Students will be required to write a short essay on a question related to themes covered in the course. The exam will be online (2 hours) and open book. Specific expectations for the essay will be provided during the last session.

Évaluation

Ressources