This book seeks to revive the field of disarmament law, building on earlier, important and still relevant, contributions by international lawyers to the subject. It will be essential for academics, researchers and policy-makers working in the area of disarmament.
Treasa Dunworth is an Associate Professor at the University of Auckland. Her work focusses on a range of public international law issues, in particular disarmament law.
Anna Hood is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Auckland. Her work focusses on a range of public international law issues including disarmament law, the history of international law and international law in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Introduction by Treasa Dunworth and Anna Hood
Part I: Disarmament Law Research Agendas
1. Disarmament Law: A Call to Arms by Treasa Dunworth
2. The Under-Explored and Evolving Landscape of Coercive Disarmament 1919-2019 by Anna Hood
Part II: Humanitarianism and Human Rights in Disarmament
3. Completing the Package: The Development and Significance of Positive Obligations in Humanitarian Disarmament Law by Bonnie Docherty
4. Human Rights-Humanitarianism in Disarmament Law by Anna Crowe
5. Addressing Victim Suffering Under Disarmament Law: Rights, Reparations and Humanising Trends in International Law by Emily Camins
Part III: Making Disarmament Law
6. Article 18 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Obligations and the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty by Masahiko Asada
7. Not a Love Affair: The Relationship Between the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty by Barry de Vries and Thilo Marauhn
8. The OSCE: A Study of the Role of 'Soft Law' in Disarmament by Lisa Tabassi and Treasa Dunworth