Books:
1.
Citations to books must include in the following order: the author’s
or editor’s name, the full title, volume number(s) when
applicable, and the year of publication (in parens.). And in small
caps (except the names of editors)
Example:
DUNCAN KENNEDY, CRITIQUE OF ADJUDICATION (1997).
PRIVATRECHT IM
RISIKOSTAAT (Dieter Hart ed., 1997)
2.
When citing to specific language or a specific idea, the page number
on which it appears shall follow the title of the publication.
E.g. ALEXANDER OPPERMAN,
INTERNATIONAL LAW 5 (1992).
Collected
Works:
1.
The name of the author of the cited essay should appear first,
followed by the title of the essay, the word “in“
and the title of the book and the first page of the essay or chapter
and the page on which the quoted language appears. The editors
names and the year of publication follow in parens.
Book chapter:
Rolf
Bahmer, Peace as a Solution to the Asylum Polemic, in
PEACE IN THE WORLD ORDER, 654, 732 (Barbara Watts & Martin
Smith eds., 1975)
2.
When citing generally to an entire essay in a collection, cite only
to the first page number of the essay.
Commentaries:
Hans
Maier, Art. 5 (1), in: KOMMENTAR ZUM GRUNDGESETZ (Manfred
Schmidt ed., 2nd ed., 2002), margin number 15.
Journals:
1.
Journal volumes should be abbreviated vol., and not Band, Jhrg, etc.
The author of the article should be followed by the title of the
article, the volume number, the name of the journal the first page
at which the article appears in the journal, followed by specific
page numbers for quoted or cited material and the year (in parens.).
2.
The full name of each journal must appear the first time it is
cited. Abbreviations should be noted in parentheses and may be used
in all subsequent cites to the same journal.
E.g. Martin Krimhengen,
Security Council Sanctions after the Gulf War: A Question of
Credibility, 23 DUTCH REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (DRIL) 65, 66
(1975).
Treaties:
1.
Required information includes the treaty name, the date of signing,
the countries signing (if three or fewer), the source, volume
number, first page number, and page containing cited material.
2.
Treaty collections shall be abbreviated as: UNTS, LNTS, ILM (without
periods).
3.
The abbreviated source name should precede the volume number; the
year of publication should follow the volume number; the first page
number and the particular page should follow that. UNTS sources
should be provided without the year of publication.
4.
Information on ratification should be included in parentheses.
E.g. Convention for the
Avoidance of Double Citizenship, 25 January 1924,
Germany-Russia-Poland, Art. 20, UNTS, vol. 22, 221, 234 (not
ratified by Germany).
E.g. Undersea Fishery
Convention, 30 March 1989, Arts. 23-24, ILM, vol. 32, 1993, 75, 79
(ratified through 1996 by seventeen States including Germany,
Russia, Great Britain and China).
Cases:
1.
All case names should be in italics (kursiv).
2.
Versus should be abbreviated v.
3.
Where appropriate or necessary, short case names should be provided
in parentheses.
4.
Cites to specific language in decisions should include a cite to the
page or paragraph where it appears. If citing to paragraphs,
please abbreviate para.
ICJ
Cases:
1.
Parties to the case should be included in parentheses following the
title.
2.
The abbreviation should precede the volume number (year), and the
page or paragraph number should follow.
E.g. Military and
Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v.
United States), ICJ Reports 1986, 14, 21.
PCIJ
Cases:
E.g. Eastern Carelia
Case, PCIJ 1923, Series B, No. 5, 7.
European
Court of Human Rights Cases:
Up
to and including 1996:
Eur.
Court H.R., Sainte-Marie v. France, Judgment of 16 December
1992, Series A, No. 253-A, para. 10.
After
1996:
Eur.
Court H.R., D. v. The United Kingdom, Judgment of 2 May 1997,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997-III, 77, para. 10.
Judgments
of European Community Courts:
Preceding
1990:
Case
70/87, Fediol v. Commission (Fediol III), 1989 E.C.R. 1781,
para. 14 (opinion of AG van Gerven).
Cases
before the European Court of Justice:
Case
C-188/88, Germany v. Commission, 1992 E.C.R. I-1689, paras.
42-47. (this
last section refers to the paragraphs in the judgment cited to)
Cases
before Court of Auditors (Tribunal, or Court of First
Instance):
Case
T-115/94, Opel Austria v. Council, 1997 E.C.R. II-39, para.
20 (hereinafter Opel Austria case).
Early
cases (without paragraph notations):
Case
6/64, Costa v. ENEL, 1964 E.C.R. 1251, 1269.
US
Supreme Court Decisions:
206
U.S. 46 (1907).
European
Court Opinions:
Opinion
1/91, Draft Treaty on the establishment of a European Economic
Area (re EEA), 1991 E.C.R. I-6079, para. 21.
European
Community Legislative Materials:
EC
Directive 96/9 of 11 March 1996, O.J. 1996 L 77/20.
European
Commission Documents:
COM
(94) 143 final, 15 April 1994.
UN
Documents:
UN
Charter, Arts. 2-3.
SC
Res. 452 of 29 July 1979.
Report
on the Assumption of Belgian Sovereignty, UN Doc. A/AC.121/30/Add. 1
(1981).
UN
GAOR, 15th Session, Supp. 16, UN Doc. A/4684 (1961).
GA
Resolutions through 1975:
GA
Res. 3427 (XXX) of 8 November 1975.
GA
Resolutions after 1975
GA
Res. 31/3 of 7 September 1976.
League
of Nations Documents:
Acts
of the Conference for the Codification of International Law, vol.
II: Minutes of the First Committee (Nationality), LN Doc.
C.351(a).M.145(a).1930.V. (1930.V.15.), 13.
Internet,
etc.:
Reference
made to legal materials found on websites or in journals as follows:
E.g.
...available at: http://www.un.org.
E.g.
...reprinted in: ILM, vol. 32, 1984, 75.