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Issue Archive

Melbourne Journal of International Law

Volume 5

May 2004

Issue 1

Articles
The Doctrine of State Responsibility as a Potential Means of Holding Private Actors Accountable for Human Rights Danwood Mzikenge Chirwa
Acting Extraterritorially to Tame Multinational Corporations for Human Rights Violations: Who Should 'Bell the Cat'? Surya Deva
A Broad Framework for the Exploration of South China Sea Hydrocarbon Deposits in the Context of the Trans-ASEAN Gas Pipeline Christopher M Flynn
Judicial Discretion and Human Rights: Expanding the Role of International Law in the Domestic Sphere Wendy Lacey
Privatising Human Rights: What Happens to the State's Human Rights Duties when Services are Privatised? Adam McBeth
Incompatible Reservations to Human Rights Treaties: Severability and the Problem of State Consent Roslyn Moloney
Testing the Ratcheting Labour Standards Proposal: Indonesia and the Shangri-La Workers Alexandra Owens
Removing the Distinction between International and Non-International Armed Conflict in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Deidre Willmott
Feature
Chief Justice Nicholson, Australian Family Law and International Human Rights The Hon Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
Case Notes
Case concerning Oil Platforms (Islamic Republic of Iran v United States of America):
Did the ICJ Miss the Boat on the Use of Force?
Andrew Garwood-Gowers
B & B and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs:
Can International Treaties Release Children from Immigration Detention Centres?
Lara Ruddle and
Sally Nicholes
Commentary
Developing Countries and the Engagement in the World Trade Organization: An Assessment of the Cancún Ministerial Jürgen Kurtz