State of necessity, now known as “necessity” and codified by Article 25 of the International Law Commission’s (ILC’s) Articles on State Responsibility (ASR), is a circumstance precluding the wrongfulness of an otherwise internationally wrongful act. Drafting Committee Reports, Comments by Governments and International Organizations, and Draft Articles and Commentaries. The ILC’s Draft Articles on Responsibility of International Organizations.State of Necessity and the Safeguarding of Community Interests.The Use of Force, Including against Terrorists, and State of Necessity.Human Rights Derogations and State of Necessity.Works on Necessity in Specific Contexts.Necessity as a Justification or as an Excuse.Extracts on Necessity from Works on Broader Topics.Works on Necessity Following the 1997 Gabcikovo-Nagymaros Decision.Works on Necessity Following Ago’s 1980 Report.Works Dedicated to State of Necessity Generally.Encyclopedias, Commentaries, Textbooks, and Courses.Cases and State Practice on Necessity Generally.Text of the Draft Articles on State of Necessity.The ILC’s Work on State of Necessity in the State Responsibility Context.
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