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The Nature of the Law of the International Civil Service The Nature of the Law of the International Civil Service
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The Relationship of the Law of the International Civil Service with International Law The Relationship of the Law of the International Civil Service with International Law
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The Nature of the International Civil Service Relationship The Nature of the International Civil Service Relationship
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The Question of the Unity of the Law of the International Civil Service The Question of the Unity of the Law of the International Civil Service
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The Sources of the Law of the International Civil Service The Sources of the Law of the International Civil Service
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The Constituent Act (and Other International Treaties Relating to the Organization) The Constituent Act (and Other International Treaties Relating to the Organization)
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Staff Regulations and Rules Staff Regulations and Rules
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Administrative Issuances Administrative Issuances
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Other Sources Other Sources
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Conclusion Conclusion
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50 The Law of the International Civil Service
Get accessSantiago Villalpando is the Chief of the Treaty Section, UN Office of Legal Affairs (OLA). Previously, he served as Registrar of the UN Dispute Tribunal in New York, and worked at the OLA Codification Division, the International Court of Justice, and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. He is Adjunct Professor at the New York University School of Law and has taught in several universities, including Geneva and Leiden. A national of Argentina, he holds an Italian law degree and a PhD in International Law from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies.
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Published:06 November 2017
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Abstract
The law of the international civil service is an essential feature of the contemporary phenomenon of international organizations (IOs). It raises, however, complex theoretical and practical issues that have been discussed for decades but are yet to be fully resolved, including its relationship with the international legal order, the legal nature of the relations it regulates, and whether it can be construed as a single integrated field of law. This chapter focuses on the nature of the field of law of the international civil service and the identification of its sources of law. Through the establishment of standards governing the relationship between the organization and its staff members, the law of international civil service fulfils the double role of guaranteeing conditions of service adequate to the achievement of the goals enshrined in the constituent act and of protecting officials from undue external pressures.
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