The 2013 edition of the yearbook opens with an international law perspective on the implications of the new United Nations women?s architecture for the situation of women worldwide. The
following six papers revisit minority protection under the League of Nations, U.N. space debris mitigation guidelines, selection decisions made by the ICC prosecutor, the advisory competence of
the Seabed Disputes Chamber, and the East African Court of Justice. A pair of LL.M theses assesses the ability of the Chilean legal framework and mining companies to adopt carbon capture and
storage standards, and the legal consequences of a denunciation of the ICSID Convention on Latin American countries? consent to arbitration already defined in a bilateral investment treaty.
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