Sobre el derecho humano al agua y la fragmentación del derecho internacional: El régimen internacional de protección de inversiones vis-a-vis las obligaciones erga omnes en materia de derechos humanos
In 2000 the International Law Commission (ILC) included within their work issues the “risks arising from the fragmentation of international law”. In the year 2006 the ILC published a full report as a result addressing what is known as the fragmentation of public international law. As international l...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | Spanish |
Published: |
2014
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Online Access: | https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7183867 |
Source: | Revista Electrónica del Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas y Sociales Ambrosio Lucas Gioja, ISSN 1851-3069, Nº. 12, 2014, pags. 140-162 |
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Summary: |
In 2000 the International Law Commission (ILC) included within their work issues the “risks arising from the fragmentation of international law”. In the year 2006 the ILC published a full report as a result addressing what is known as the fragmentation of public international law. As international law developed gradually evidenced a trend towards specializing in an increasingly growing number of issues to jeopardize their homogeneity as legal branch and enhance potential fragmentation. This trend has been marked as a result of new topics that placed international law in a delicate spot between sub-areas of international law and completely independent of it. In this paper we address this problem on two sub-branches of international law such as the right investment and human rights applied to drinking water. |
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