04771nam 2200709 450 991046053500332120200520144314.00-19-105595-6(CKB)3710000000530052(EBL)4310756(SSID)ssj0001591479(PQKBManifestationID)16290556(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001591479(PQKBWorkID)12385136(PQKB)10470470(MiAaPQ)EBC4310756(StDuBDS)EDZ0001190130(Au-PeEL)EBL4310756(CaPaEBR)ebr11138603(CaONFJC)MIL879668(OCoLC)918987793(EXLCZ)99371000000053005220160128h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe financial obligation in international law /Rutsel Silvestre J. MarthaFirst edition.Oxford, England :Oxford University Press,2015.©20151 online resource (657 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-19-873638-X Includes bibliographical references and index.4.2 The Presumption of Applicability of International Law4.3 Inherent Limitation of Choice of Law Provisions; 4.4 Mutation into Domestic Law Obligations; 5 Transactions Involving State Entities and Government Departments; 5.1 The Issue of Attribution of Conduct to Government; 5.2 Transactions Between Central Banks; 5.3 Financial Transactions of Bilateral Aid Agencies; 6 Transactions Involving International Organizations; 6.1 Internal Financial Relations; 6.2 International Financial Relations; 6.3 Financial Relations with International Civil Servants7 International Financial Obligations Owed to Private Parties7.1 General; 7.2 Delictual Liability; 7.3 Private Parties as the Ultimate Beneficiaries; III. CURRENCY OF OBLIGATIONS; 8 The Currency of Account; 8.1 Inter-State Transactions; 8.2 The Funding of International Organizations; 8.3 The Remuneration of International Civil Servants; 8.4 Multiple Currency Obligations; 8.5 Secondary Obligations; 9 The Currency of Payment; 9.1 General; 9.2 Primary Obligations; 9.3 Secondary Obligations; IV. VALUE RISKS OF OBLIGATIONS; 10 The Exchange Rate; 10.1 Risk Allocation; 10.2 Primary Obligations10.3 Secondary Obligations11 Nominalism; 11.1 General; 11.2 Primary Obligations; 11.3 Secondary Obligations; 12 Value Maintenance; 12.1 Party Autonomy; 12.2 Exchange Risks Provisions; 12.3 Gold Clauses; 12.4 Exchange-rate-guarantee Arrangements; 12.5 Composite Currency Clauses; 12.6 Anti-inflation Provisions; 12.7 Adaptation and Renegotiation; 12.8 Maintaining the Value of the Capital of International Financial Institutions; 13 Substitution; 13.1 Enabling Clauses; 13.2 Succession of Currencies; 13.3 Fundamental Change in the Monetary System; V. VALIDITY OF OBLIGATIONS14 Provisional Presumption of Validity15 Capacity; 15.1 States, Political Sub-divisions and Instrumentalities, and Disputed Areas; 15.2 International Organizations; 16 Authority; 16.1 Governmental Illegitimacy; 16.2 Authority of Representatives; 17 Competence; 17.1 General; 17.2 Competence to Provide Finance; 17.3 Competence to Borrow; 18 Appropriateness of the Object; 18.1 General; 18.2 Conflict with Intransgressible Conventional Clauses; 18.3 Impossibility; 19 Unvitiated Declaration of Will; 20 Forms and Formalities; 20.1 General; 20.2 Formalities in Decision-making20.3 Registration of TransactionsThis study concerns international legal obligations, and is thus about substantive law. Substantive law defines rights, duties, and liabilities. It does not encompass either adjectival law, by which substantive law is applied, or `corporate' law of the parties to the obligatory relations.International obligationsDebts, PublicLaw and legislationDebts, ExternalLaw and legislationInternational financeLaw and legislationInternational lawEconomic aspectsElectronic books.International obligations.Debts, PublicLaw and legislation.Debts, ExternalLaw and legislation.International financeLaw and legislation.International lawEconomic aspects.343.07Martha Rutsel Silvestre J.676003MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910460535003321The financial obligation in international law2142900UNINA