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INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONAL LAW

Academic year and teacher
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Versione italiana
Academic year
2017/2018
Teacher
ALESSANDRA ANNONI
Credits
6
Didactic period
Secondo Semestre
SSD
IUS/13

Training objectives

The course, which is taught in English, will introduce students to the phenomenon of international organization, offering them basic notions on the nature and the rules governing the formation, the functioning, the dissolution and succession of international organizations.

Through the analysis of case-studies, the course aims also at enhancing the students’ ability to deal with international practice and case-law, and to develop a critical approach towards highly topical issues.

Prerequisites

Students enrolled in one of the Degrees offered by the Law Department who have not yet passed the exams of Constitutional Law, Institutions of Private Law and International Law will not be admitted to sit the exam. Incoming exchange students are advised to complete the online self-assessment test on International and EU Law available at: http://goo.gl/forms/N0xwMLvtXwd6FFkw1. Students who score less than 22/30 on this test are strongly encouraged to attend the intensive course on Introduction to International and EU Law (18 September-6 October 2017 or the Course of Introduction to EU Law (12 February-2 March 2018) prior to the course of International Institutional Law.

Course programme

Lectures (33 hours):
Purpose and nature of international organizations: the rise of modern organizations and their classification; legal personality of international organizations under international and domestic law. - Set up, dissolution and succession of international organizations: treaties and other instruments establishing international organizations; dissolution; succession. – Powers of international organizations: attributed, implied and inherent powers. - Membership in international organizations: accession and termination of membership; State succession and membership in international organizations. – Privileges and immunities of international organizations: sources of law and recent practice. – The structure of international organizations: organs and other bodies. - The legal instruments of international organizations and their implementation within domestic legal orders: binding and non-binding instruments; treaty making power of international organizations; decision making and judicial review; the implementation of the acts of international organizations within domestic legal orders. - Responsibility of international organizations: International Law Commission’s Draft Articles of 2011; attribution of the wrongful conduct; Member States’ responsibility for acts of international organizations; responsibility of the Organization in connection with acts of its Member States - Dispute settlement: advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice; other tribunals within the UN system; administrative tribunals.

Seminars (7 hours):
Seminars will be devoted to the analysis of recent case-law or to in-depth focuses on specific topics covered during the lectures. Working in small groups or individually, students will be encouraged to prepare a presentation and to foster the discussion in class.

Didactic methods

Lectures and seminars, the latter devoted to the discussion of case-studies, either real of fictitious.

Learning assessment procedures

Oral exam in English. The final mark will take into account also the evaluation of assignments presented by students during the seminars. To pass the exam, students must score at least 18/30.

Reference texts

Students who attend classes may prepare for the exam revising their own notes and studying the texts included in the reading list published on the course's website. Students who do not attend classes may prepare for the exam studying J. KLABBERS, An Introduction to International Organizations Law, 3a ed., Cambridge University Press, 2015, with the exclusion of Chapters 6, 11 and 15.