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Philippine Materials in International Law

Buch | Hardcover
512 Seiten
2021 | Approx. 500 pp.
Martinus Nijhoff (Verlag)
978-90-04-46971-6 (ISBN)
CHF 297,95 inkl. MwSt
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The most authoritative international law documents in Philippine history are brought together in one book for the first time. These are primary materials that illuminate Philippine interpretations of international law doctrine.
This is a collection of international law materials relating to the Philippines: excerpts of treaties and declarations; international judicial and arbitral decisions; and Philippine constitutional clauses, statutes and Supreme Court decisions.



Today new theories abound, calling for comparative perspectives that look at international law through the lens of national and regional practice. This book engages with that challenge at a concrete level, e.g., how Marcos's human rights abuses were litigated abroad but never in Philippine courts, and how victim claims for reparations are, ironically, blocked by the Philippine Government citing the Filipino people’s competing claims over Marcos's ill-gotten wealth. It retells Philippine history using international law, and re-examines international law using the Philippine experience.

Raul C. Pangalangan is a former Judge at the International Criminal Court, where he presided over the first ICC trial of war crimes involving attacks against religious and historical heritage. He is a Professor of Law and former Law Dean at the University of the Philippines. He holds the Diploma of The Hague Academy of International Law and received his S.J.D. from the Harvard Law School.

Acknowledgements


Note to the Reader


Introduction


1 Constituting the Philippine State in International Law

  Overview


  From the August 1896 Uprising to the December 1897 Peace Agreement


  America Wages War on Spain and Brings Aguinaldo to Manila


  The U.S. Takes Manila and Spain Cedes the Philippine Archipelago


  Aguinaldo’s Government Protests the U.S.-Spain Negotiations over the Philippines


 I Declaration of a State of War by Governor-General Ramón Blanco (Martial Law Proclamation) (1896)


 ii Act of Agreement Adopted for the Pacification of the Island of Luzon (Pact of Biak-na-Bato) (1897)


 iii Declaration of Philippine Independence (1898)


 iv U.S. President William McKinley: Messages on the Philippine Campaign


 v Basis for Establishment of Peace (Protocol of Peace) (1898)


 vi Treaty of Peace between Spain and the United States (Treaty of Paris) (1898)


 vii Treaty between the Kingdom of Spain and United States of America for Cession of Outlying Islands of the Philippines (Cession Agreement) (1900)


 viii Felipe Agoncillo’s Official Protest against the Paris Peace Treaty (1898)


 ix Aguinaldo’s Manifesto Protesting the United States’ Claim of Sovereignty over the Philippines (1899)


 x Political Constitution of the Republic (Malolos Constitution) (1899)


 xi Proclamation on U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt’s Pardon of the People of the Philippine Archipelago (Amnesty Proclamation) (1902)


 xii The Philippine Autonomy Act (Jones Law) (1916)


 xiii Philippine Independence Act (Tydings-McDuffie Act) (1934)


 xiv U.S. President Harry S. Truman’s Proclamation of Philippine Independence (1946)


 xv Philippine Statute Changing Date of Philippine Independence Day from July 4 (from the Date of Truman’s Proclamation) to June 12 (from the Date of Aguinaldo’s 1898 Declaration of Independence)




2 The Armed Conflict with the United States before the Courts and Courts-Martial

  Overview


  Courts-Martial for Breaches of the Laws of War


  Arbitral Proceedings over Damages Caused by the “Insurgents”


  U.S. Amnesty of the “Insurgents”


 i Courts-Martial by the United States (1901–02)


 ii International Arbitration Arising from the Armed Conflict


 iii Cases Decided by Philippine Courts




3 National Territory

  Overview


  Terrestrial Claims


  Maritime Territory


 i The National Territory vis-à-vis Other States


 ii The National Territory vis-à-vis Claims of Internal Autonomy




4 The Philippines and the International Court of Justice

 Overview


  The Philippine Submission to Compulsory Jurisdiction


  1982 Manila Declaration


  Philippine Participation in the Work of the Court


 i Philippine Declaration Submitting to Compulsory Jurisdiction (1972)


 ii Manila Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes


 iii Sovereignty over Pulau Ligitan and Pulau Sipadan (Indonesia v. Malaysia) (Permission to Intervene by the Philippines) (2001)




5 Sources of International Law

  Overview


  Key Constitutional Clauses


  Executive Agreements


  Role of the Legislative Branch


  “Soft Law”


  Recommendations by Human Rights Treaty Bodies


  Termination and Withdrawal from a Treaty


 i icj Statute


 ii The Treaty Clause in Relation to the Incorporation Clause


 iii Non-Treaty Sources of International Obligation


 iv Unilateral Declarations: Province of North Cotabato v. Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace Panel on Ancestral Domain (2008)


 v Recommendations by Human Rights Treaty Bodies: Felipe and Evelyn Pestaño, Communication No. 1619/2007 (Views of the Human Rights Committee, 2010)


 vi “Soft Law”


 vii Treaties




6 U.S. Military Bases

  Overview


 1 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines


 i Philippine Commonwealth and Independence Act (1934)


 ii Treaty of General Relations between the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America (1946)


 iii bayan v. Zamora (2000)


 iv Lim v. Executive Secretary (2002)


 v Nicolas v. Romulo (2009)


 vi Saguisag v. Ochoa, Jr. (2016)


 vii Opinions of the Secretary of Justice: Other Military Agreements Treated as Mere Executive Agreements




7 Human Rights Cases from the Marcos Dictatorship

  Overview


  Reparations Claims in U.S. Courts under the Alien Tort Claims Act


  Procedural Impediments to Enforcement in Philippine Courts


  Competing Claims over the Marcos Assets: The Government’s Claim for Forfeiture Stolen Wealth versus The Human Rights Victims’ Claim for Reparations


  Legislative Relief for the Marcos Human Rights Victims


  Historical Revisionism


 i Human Rights Victims’ Claims in U.S. Courts under the U.S. Alien Tort Claims Act and Their Enforcement in Philippine Courts


 ii Historical Revisionism through the Courts




8 Immunities

  Immunity of States


  Immunity of International Organizations


 i States


 ii International Organizations




9 Extradition

  The Philippines as the Requested State


 i The Philippines as the Requested State


 ii The Philippines as the Requesting State: Philippine Request for the Extradition of Rodolfo Pacificador (2002)




10 International Criminal Law

  Extra-Territorial Criminal Jurisdiction: Piracy in the High Seas


  Crimes Committed during World War ii


  Command Responsibility


  The International Criminal Court


  The Legal Treatment of Armed Groups: Overlap between the Domestic Crime of Rebellion and ihl Rules on Non-International Armed Conflicts


 i Extra-Territorial Criminal Jurisdiction: People v. Lol-lo and Saraw (1922)


 ii Crimes Committed During wwii


 iii Command Responsibility


 iv The International Criminal Court


 v The Application of International Law to Armed Rebel Groups in the Philippines




Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Brill's Asian Law Series ; 11
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 973 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Öffentliches Recht Völkerrecht
ISBN-10 90-04-46971-0 / 9004469710
ISBN-13 978-90-04-46971-6 / 9789004469716
Zustand Neuware
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