Derived from
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13769 DIRITTO INTERNAZIONALE in Business Administration L-18 0 COCCIA Massimo
(syllabus)
The course is divided into two parts (general part and special part).
The first part, of a general nature and covering about 85% of the course hours, deals with the study of the following topics: - the definition, origin and distinctive features of international law, as well as an understanding of the particular profiles of legality and obligatory nature of the international legal system; - the birth of the state and its characteristics of independence and sovereignty as a subject of international law, as well as other, real and presumed subjects of international law; - the formation of international standards and the relationship between the different sources; - general international law, custom, general principles of law, jus cogens and erga omnes obligations, as well as the related codification; - international agreements and the law of treaties as codified in the 1969 Vienna Convention, with particular regard to the stipulation, interpretation, reservations, invalidity and extinction, as well as the succession of States in the treaties; international organizations and their acts; - the UN Charter, the organs and acts of the UN, the use of force, the collective security system and peace-keeping and peace-enforcement operations; - the implementation of international standards in state legal systems; - international offense and liability for violation of international obligations; - peaceful resolution and prevention of international disputes.
The second part of the course, of a specialist nature and covering about 15% of the course hours, is dedicated to the World Trade Organization: - the institutions and rules of international trade from GATT to the WTO, with rounds of trade negotiations and the development of legislation on international trade in goods and services; - the principle of non-discrimination, in terms of internal and external equal treatment; - duties and non-tariff barriers to trade, such as quantitative restrictions, subsidies and dumping; - exceptions and exceptions, such as free trade areas, safeguard measures, and measures for developing countries; - the dispute resolution system, with the panels and the Appellate Body.
Seminars: during the course seminars are sometimes held on topical topics, including interdisciplinary ones in collaboration with teachers from other professorships and inviting scholars and experts from other universities or institutions.
(reference books)
AA.VV. (S.M. Carbone, R. Luzzatto, A. Santa Maria e altri), Istituzioni di diritto internazionale, Quinta edizione, G. Giappichelli Editore, Torino, 2016; solamente i capitoli (e le pagine) seguenti: • cap. I-IV (pp. 1-179); • cap. VI-VIII (pp. 229-371); • sez. seconda del cap. IX (pp. 418-431); • cap. XIII (pp. 555-606).
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