
Negotiation drives peaceful dispute settlement by requiring good faith, flexibility, and compromise, with cases like Libya-Chad illustrating framework agreements and ICJ adjudication when negotiations fail.
Trace the history of the international court of justice from the PCIJ to the present. Understand its jurisdiction, bench composition, including ad hoc judges, and how its decisions are enforced.
Article 36(2) enables states to accept ICJ jurisdiction in four areas. These cover treaty interpretation, questions of international law, existence of facts implying responsibility, and reparations.
Examine the ICJ's advisory jurisdiction under Article 65, its use by UN bodies and international organizations, and key precedents like Eastern Carelia, Interpretation of Peace Treaties, and Western Sahara.
The course will provide the learners in depth understanding of the concepts and procedure for peaceful settlement of international disputes in the light of relevant international practice.
The course improves problem solving abilities, particularly while answering Multiple Choice Questions, Computer Generated and complicated testing methods and thus will enable them to take Competitive Exams better.
This course is specially meant for students taking UGC NET (Law) and Civil Services Aspirants.
This course is also important for those taking up exams related to International Laws. In this Course along with 300+ mins of video presented in 10 sessions of roughly 30 mins each,
The instructor does not claim to provide all the essential information on the topic. Before taking the course, the learners are requested to complete Module 1 and Module 2 of this course series
The students are also requested to browse through the essentials on the topic.
For law students taking university exams and those preparing for competitive law examinations, this course would be ideal as a revision aid.
Since the course covers a lot of current developments relating to International Laws, the learner can hope to answer many of the questions that will form part of the General Studies question paper.