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Article contents
Abstract
- Type
- International Law in Domestic Legal Orders: A Comparative Perspective
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1997
References
1 For details, see Oanilenko, Gennady, The New Russian Constitution and International Law, 88 Am. J. Int’l L. 451, 461 (1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 KONST. RF (1993).
3 Id
4 Report on the Conformity of the Legal Order of the Russian Federation with the Council of Europe Standards, Doc. AS/Bur/Russia (1994), reprinted in 15 Hum. RTS. L. J. 249, 250 (1994).
5 See Vestn. Konst. Suda RF, 1993, No. 3 [bimonthly], case re: Labor Code, at 29 [hereinafter Labor Code].
6 See Sobr. Zakonod. RF, 1996, No. 16 [weekly], Item 1909.
7 See Biull. Verkh. Suda RF, 1996, No. 1, at 3.
8 Labor Code, supra note 5.
9 See Vestn. Konst. Suda RF, 1995, No. 2/3 [bimonthly], case re: Collective Labor Disputes, at 45.
10 Sobr. Zakonod. RF, 1995, No. 29 [Weekly], item 2757, art. 5.
11 See Vestn. Konst. Suda RF, 1995, No. 5 [monthly], case re: Chechnya, at 3.
12 See Sobr. Zakonod. RF, 1996, No. 7 [Weekly], Art. No. 701.
13 Under the existing Criminal Procedure Code, it is possible to request the review of a conviction following a finding by international organs by referring to a “new circumstance” or a breach of “the law, ” a formula that may include violations of international law. Similar considerations may be invoked in civil cases.