International Labour Conventions and National Law: The Effectiveness of the Automatic Incorporation of Treaties in National Legal Systems

Sampul Depan
Virginia A. Leary
BRILL, 1 Jan 1982 - 191 halaman
The International Labour Law Reports is a series of annual publications of labour law judgements by the highest courts in a number of jurisdictions. I.L.L.R. is intended primarily for the use of judges, labour law practitioners, industrial relations specialists & students who need or desire ready access to authoritative information of a comparative nature on problems arising in the field of labour law & industrial relations. Each judgement reprinted in I.L.L.R. is accompanied by Headnotes & in practically all cases by an Annotation which sets forth, among other things, the legal issues involved, the basic facts of the case (if not included in the judgement itself), the relevant statutory provisions & judicial precedents, the labour law & industrial relations context in which the case arose & the significance of the judgement in the development of the law. The I.L.L.R. provide the reader with factual information that is not coloured by the personal views of the annotators. As a rule, judgements are printed in extenso : editorial discretion has been relied upon to delete or to summarize portions of judgements that are purely technical or only of marginal interest. Volume 12 covers the period 1 October 1991 to 30 September 1992.

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States Invoking Automatic Incorporation as Guaranteeing Con
3
States Rarely Invoking Automatic Incorporation as Guaran
29
Argentina
82
France
88
ILO Supervision and the SelfExecuting Nature
96
Language as Indicating SelfExecuting Nature of Convention
105
Conclusion
112
ILO Conventions and Conflicting National Norms
124
Conclusion
132
Reflections on
150
Relevance of the ILO Experience for the Future Application
161
Bibliography
171
Table of Cases
181
Index
187
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