Lee | International Law in Action | Buch | 978-1-032-81859-7 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 298 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

Lee

International Law in Action

Domestic and Global Legal Affairs Viewed through a Legal Prism
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-032-81859-7
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Domestic and Global Legal Affairs Viewed through a Legal Prism

Buch, Englisch, 298 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN: 978-1-032-81859-7
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd


This book provides an indispensable source for understanding Korean economic and political views. It compiles select news commentaries on the impact of international law on Korean domestic markets and politics from 2010-2020.

Each section of the book begins with an original essay by the author discussing core issues covered by the news commentaries. Articles then follow after, providing at-the-time analysis of the interactions between international law and international relations, as well as the interaction between domestic and international law. Many of the issues, such as China-US relations and refugee policy, are of global relevance, and the thematic clusters will give the readers and students a picture of:

• how international law actually operates in the field

• how international law and international relations interact, and

• how legal discourse is taking place in the global and domestic community in this process.

Written with a colloquial tone and colourful idioms, this supplementary reading is perfect for students looking to enrich their understanding of how law lies behind newspaper headlines. It will also be of interest to scholars and instructors of international economic law, Korean studies, and international relations.

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Postgraduate and Undergraduate Advanced


Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


I. Introduction

II. Law as a Critical Component of Domestic Society – Stipulating Norms and Resolving Disputes
1. Stay Vigilant When Exports Hit Record

2. Entitlement to a Perfect Vacation?

3. No Rest for a Busy Country

4. A High Bar For Political Asylum In Korea

5. Oops, Korea Labeled As Tax Haven

6. Time To Play It Cool

7. Despite 20-year Deregulation Drive, Businesses Still Concerned Over Red Tape

8. Defining ‘Cyber Attacks’

9. Shifting into Reverse Gear?

10. Uber Battle Moves to Seoul

11. Here Come the Hearings Again

12. Ending 18 Years of Controversy

13. No More Gifts and No More Lunches

14. Responsible Parliamentary Audit

15. Divided and Adrift

16. Detail National Issues for the Record

17. Will Minimum Wage Hike Step Up Automation?

18. In the National Assembly We Trust

19. Unique Problem of Graying Korea

20. Not a Good Time for Divisive Politics

21. Jeju a Testing Ground for Refugee Policy

22. How Many Hours Do You Work?

23. Still Torn Between Two Cities

24. New Technology, the New Economy and Overregulation

25. Debates, Sufficient Deliberations Key to Legislative Process

26. Supreme Court is Swamped

27. Checks and Balances Key to ‘Prosecution-Police’ Debate

28. Global Games of Chicken

29. Supreme Court’s Pivotal Decision

30. Remember-Me-Not and Korea

31. South Korea’s birth rate has become a national emergency

III. Law as a Critical Component for the Global Community – Achievements and Challenges for a Rules-Based System

1. The price for a Korean peace treaty

2. Searching for Effective Countermeasure

3. Treaty of Ganghwa of 1876

4. Settlement of Comfort Women Issue
5. Why Do We Keep Losing This Game?

6. Strategic Ambiguity and Paralysis

7. A Warm Breeze from Cuba 106
8. A Peace Treaty – More Complex Than It Seems

9. Struggling in China

10. A rough start to the new year

11. Forgotten Procedural Checkboxes

12. Will this dose of sanctions work?

13. Red Line?: NK’s 6th nuclear test

14. Two Koreas finally recognize two Koreas

15. To make peace, declaring the war is over is an important first step

16. With progress on denuclearization, economic cooperation projects ready to roll

17. South Korea's Thaad trilemma a tricky balancing act

18. TPP, A Victim of Its Own Success?

19. Iran Deal’s Implications for Korea

20. Spirit and Violation of Bilateral Pacts

21. Bringing chorus back to KORUS

22. Start small, think big on cooperation with NK

23. Korea Caught In The Middle Again

24. What went wrong? It’s time to look at the military’s security posture

25. Peaceful, But Not Peaceful March

IV. International Organizations and NGOs – Contributions and Limitations in Various Sectors

1. Law on the Return of Artifacts

2. Fast and Steady Wins the Race

3. A New Paradigm for Effective Aid

4. A Bumpy Road for the GGGI

5. Time to Eradicate IUU Fishing

6. Greenpeace’s “Nuclear Emergency” Campaign in Seoul

7. Korea and Illegal Fishing

8. Korea Exits Fishing Blacklist

9. Our Ocean, Our Future

10. The UN-Condemned Mandatory Medical Testing

11. Money is Fungible

12. A Whale of a Departure

13. Greater Role as UNSC Member

14. Cooperation From Bali to Bali

15. Knowledge Sharing Program

16. A Red Card from Brussels?

17. What Happened in 1362 and 2012

18. Climate Change Convention with Binding Teeth

19. Subsidies for Civil Aircraft Development

20. WTO Accession: Here Comes Russia

21. WTO’s New Director-General at a Critical Juncture

22. The Perfect Not the Enemy of the Good

23. Seeking Scientific Rationale

24. A Whale of a Science Project

25. The High Cost of Financial Distrust

V. International Law in the Field – Disputes, Treaties and International Courts

1. Disputes in the East China Sea

2. Racing Against the Clock

3. Issues in FTA with China

4. Elephant in the Room

5. Pirates, Private Security Firms, Consuls

6. Sharing Benefits of FTA – But How?

7. Hot Pursuit, Cold Relations

8. Nonbinding, Amicable Procedure Does Not Just Bark, It Bites, Too

9. Cheonan and U.N. Security Council

10. A Whaling War in The Hague

11. One Treaty, Two Interpretations

12. Chasing Two Targets in Oil Imports

13. Who Are Subject to Treaties?

14. A Rare Rush to Apple’s Rescue

15. To Err is Human, But Not Granted

16. From Coral Reefs to a Power Hub

17. International Law and Sea Dispute

18. Tricky Path Ahead: Triangular Talks

19. Better Late than Never

20. Tackling Non-Tarriff Barriers

21. Here Comes the Korea-EU FTA

22. FTAs and Trade Remedy Measures

23. Perils of Investment Disputes

24. Trade Disputes and Domestic Policies

25. The FTA Journey Has Just Begun

26. Rare Earths Require Rare Solution

27. Korea’s First International Investment Dispute

28. An SPS Dispute on the Horizon?

29. Time for Rice Tariffication

30. It Is All About NTBs

31. Writing the Rules on Trade

32. CPTPP is a Good Club to Join, but Membership Fee is a Question

33. Just One Word, but a Sea of Difference

34. Korean-made Civil Aircraft Soars

35. BSE Doesn’t Light Candles This Time

36. Final Ending of Lone Star Story

VI. Outer Parameters of Law - Limitations of Legal Discourse

1. Sweet Dream, Harsh Reality Jumbled Up

2. H1N1, G-20 and Vaccines

3. Who is Paying the Price?

4. Law Enforcement Beyond Borders

5. Battle over Google’s Search List

6. New EU Rules to Protect Personal Data

7. Striking a Balance Between Data and Privacy: A Second Try

8. Long Overdue: Refugee Review System Overhaul

9. Yuan Duel Looming in Seoul

10. Customs Rules Behind the Times

11. Regulation of Foreign Exchange Market

12. Global Competition, Fragmented Disposition

13. Calm Needed in Costco Fiasco

14. In Case of Doubt, Let Competition Prevail

15. Is Pandora’s Box Open?: The Specter of Regulatory Subsidies

16. The G-20 Summit in Seoul and Beyond

17. Bank Bailouts: Too Aggressive To Fail

18. New Concept for Action Against Genocide

19. Laudable but Misplaced: EU's Aviation ETS Tax

20. To Make a Long Story Short

21. Defining Collective Self-Defense

22. War of Public Corporations

23. New Dilemma on Digital Privacy

24. AI Changes Everything, but How Far Can It Go?

25. Rise of AI demands global leaders act fast on regulation

26. EU must rethink carbon border tax to sidestep legal problems

VII. Concluding Thoughts


Jaemin Lee is Dean and Professor of Law at School of Law, Seoul National University in Seoul, Korea. He served as President of the Korean Society Of International Economic Law (2020-2021).



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