South West Africa and the United Nations: An International Mandate in DisputeExamination of historical and legal aspects of the role of South Africa R in Namibia, the role of UN mandates (trust territory) system therein, and the conflict over international accountability, up to the act of revocation of the mandate and its endorsement by the ICJ on june 21 1971 - examines the evolution of the Trusteeship Council system, the 1950 advisory opinion of the ICJ and attempts at its implementation, etc., and considers implications for international law. Bibliography pp. 385 to 398 and references. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Historical Background | 9 |
Operation of the League Mandates System | 39 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
4th Ctte accordance administration adopted advisory opinion annexation apartheid Applicants argument Article 22 Assembly Bantustans Charter clause colonial Committee on South conclusion Conference Court of Justice Covenant decision declared delegate dispute dissenting opinion draft resolution Ethiopia and Liberia fact Fourth Committee G.A. Res GAOR Ibid international accountability International Court international law international status interpretation issue Judge Jessup Judges Spender judicial supervision jurisdiction League Council League of Nations mandated territories mandates system mandatory power matter ment Namibia Opinion 1971 Native negotiations obligations opinion of Judge oral Paris Peace Conference Permanent Mandates Commission petitions political principle procedure proceedings proposal provisions question racial reference regard relating representative Respondent Respondent's rule Security Council Sess Smuts South Africa South West Africa submissions submit supervisory SWA Judgment 1966 SWA Pleadings tion treaty trusteeship agreement trusteeship system U.N. Doc Union government Union of South United Kingdom United Nations United Nations Charter vote