Book contents
- State Responsibility and Rebels
- Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
- State Responsibility and Rebels
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- 1 The Past and Present of State Responsibility for Rebels
- 2 The System: Mixed Claims Commissions in the Shadow of Empire
- 3 The Cases: Autonomy, Ambiguity and Doctrine in the Work of the Commissions
- 4 The Scholarship: Resistance and Development
- 5 The Codification Projects: Stalemate
- 6 The Legacy: Protecting Investment against Revolution in the Decolonised World
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
1 - The Past and Present of State Responsibility for Rebels
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2021
- State Responsibility and Rebels
- Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
- State Responsibility and Rebels
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- 1 The Past and Present of State Responsibility for Rebels
- 2 The System: Mixed Claims Commissions in the Shadow of Empire
- 3 The Cases: Autonomy, Ambiguity and Doctrine in the Work of the Commissions
- 4 The Scholarship: Resistance and Development
- 5 The Codification Projects: Stalemate
- 6 The Legacy: Protecting Investment against Revolution in the Decolonised World
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
Summary
The idea that states have to exercise due diligence in protecting investments against non-state armed actors and Article 10 of the Articles on the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts have common origins in the emergence and contestation of the rules of state responsibility for injuries to foreign nationals (or ‘aliens’) by rebels during the nineteenth- and early-twentieth centuries. Tracing these common origins, the story starts with a series of arbitrations involving Latin American states that were set up between 1839 and 1927. It then follows the scholarly debates about state responsibility for rebels that proliferated particularly from the turn of the twentieth century onwards, finishing with the League of Nations Codification Conference at The Hague in 1930 where states failed to agree a convention on responsibility. This first chapter sets out the book’s main argument and situates it theoretically and methodologically.
Keywords
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- Chapter
- Information
- State Responsibility and RebelsThe History and Legacy of Protecting Investment Against Revolution, pp. 1 - 35Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021