1: Bardo Fassbender: Introduction
2: Daphna Shraga: The Security Council and Human Rights - From
Discretion to Promote to Obligation to Protect
3: Vera Gowlland-Debbas: The Security Council as Enforcer of Human
Rights
4: Bardo Fassbender: The Role for Human Rights in the
Decision-making Process of the Security Council
5: Annalisa Ciampi: Security Council Targeted Sanctions and Human
Rights
6: Erika de Wet: Human Rights Considerations and the Enforcement of
Targeted Sanctions in Europe: The Emergence of Core Standards of
Judicial Protection
7: Salvatore Zappalà: Reviewing Security Council Measures in the
Light of International Human Rights Principles
Annex 1: Guidelines of the Committee for the Conduct of its Work
(Security Council Committee established Pursuant to Resolution 1267
(1999) concerning Al Qaida and the Taliban and Associated
Individuals and Entities)
Bardo Fassbender is Professor of International Law at the
Bundeswehr University in Munich. He studied at the University of
Bonn and holds an LL.M from Yale Law School and a Doctor iuris from
the Humboldt University in Berlin. Before joining the Bundeswehr
University, he taught in Berlin, St Gallen, and Munich (Ludwig
Maximilians University). His principal fields of research are
international law, United Nations law, German constitutional law,
comparative
constitutional law and theory, and the history of international and
constitutional law. Among his many publications are the books UN
Security Council and the Right of Veto: A Constitutional
Perspective (The
Hague/London/Boston, 1998), Der offene Bundesstaat: Studien zur
auswärtigen Gewalt und zur Völkerrechtssubjektivität
bundesstaatlicher Teilstaaten in Europa (Tübingen, 2007), and The
United Nations Charter as the Constitution of the International
Community (Leiden/Boston, 2009).
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