Chinese Journal of International Law Advance Access originally published online on June 20, 2007
Chinese Journal of International Law 2007 6(2):475-506; doi:10.1093/chinesejil/jmm019
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
PRACTICE & DOCUMENTS |
Chinese Practice in Public International Law: 2006 (I)1
Correspondence: * Lecturer, Faculty of International Law, China University of Political Science and Law (CUPL), Beijing, People's Republic China. LL.D. (Peking University), LL.M. (Lund University, Sweden), LL.B. (Peking University) (email: lijiangz{at}cupl.edu.cn). All the websites are visited before 25 March 2007.
This part of the Survey covers materials reflecting Chinese practice in 2006 relating to: I. Subjects under discussion at the ILC (Shared natural resources; responsibility of international organizations; reservation to treaties; unilateral acts of states; effects of armed conflicts on treaties; obligation to extradition or prosecution; fragmentation of international law); II. International human rights law (general commitment on human rights; collective human rights, including right of self-determination, right to development; civil and political rights, including freedom of religion, freedom of expression, issue of organ transplants; economic, social and cultural rights, including right to food, right to health; human rights of aliens, including freedom of press of foreign correspondents, rights of refugees; human rights of special groups, including rights of ethnic minorities, rights of indigenous peoples, rights of women, rights of children, rights of immigrants, rights of persons with disabilities, rights of older persons; implementation of international human rights law, including the establishment of UN Human Rights Council, review of mandates and mechanisms of UN Human Rights Council, the implementation of human rights instruments, human rights dialogue and corporation; human rights situation in foreign countries, including Myanmar, Middle East; human rights and international trade); III. International humanitarian law.
1 This survey is provided only for information. Readers are advised to consult the official documents themselves for their research. Part II will appear later.