Extensively updated, this third edition textbook clearly conveys the set-up of international organisations and the logic behind international institutional law.
This market-leading textbook has been updated extensively to reflect the entry into force of the EU's Lisbon Treaty and new articles on the responsibility of international organisations. It also includes two new chapters on the international civil service and the relations between organisations and other institutions, respectively.
The third edition of this market-leading textbook (previously called An Introduction to International Institutional Law) is written in a clear, three-part structure. It is centred on the dynamics of the relationships between international organisations and their organs, staff, and the outside world. It discusses the essential topics of the law of international organisations, including powers, finances, and privileges and immunities, as well as membership rules, institutional structures, and accountability. The newly revised text has been updated extensively to reflect the entry into force of the EU's Lisbon Treaty (and Croatia's accession) and new articles on the responsibility of international organisations. The chapters have also been reorganised for further clarity. Two new chapters, on the international civil service and the relations between organisations and other institutions, respectively, have been added.
Jan Klabbers has been teaching international law and the law of international organisations for more than two decades and currently holds the Martti Ahtisaari Chair at the University of Helsinki. He has held visiting positions at, amongst others, New York University Law School, the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva) and the University of Paris. He has received several awards for excellence in teaching, and the first two editions of this book have met with general acclaim.
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