Subjectivity and liability of state in law and international relations-the outline of issue.

Karolina Baraniak

Abstract


The subject of international public law is defined as that, who appears in international relations, which procedings are regulated by international law. International liability of the state is born as a result of its violation of international law.

The concept of subject in international relations seems to be necessary for the discussion of the concept of international legal subjectivity. The legal approach to international relations is that the subject of international law is state and some international organizations, in turn
the philosophical approach proclaims, that the subject of international relations should be considered as physical entity[1].


 


Full Text:

PDF




Copyright (c) 2017 Edupedia Publications Pvt Ltd

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

 

All published Articles are Open Access at  https://journals.pen2print.org/index.php/ijr/ 


Paper submission: ijr@pen2print.org