Al-Daghash, A. (2024). (The perspective of international liability for obligation for damage resulting from nuclear radiation leakage). , 14(Issue: 2 part 1), 529-557. doi: 10.37651/aujlps.2024.151992.1316
Ayad Mahmood Jasim Al-Daghash. "(The perspective of international liability for obligation for damage resulting from nuclear radiation leakage)". , 14, Issue: 2 part 1, 2024, 529-557. doi: 10.37651/aujlps.2024.151992.1316
Al-Daghash, A. (2024). '(The perspective of international liability for obligation for damage resulting from nuclear radiation leakage)', , 14(Issue: 2 part 1), pp. 529-557. doi: 10.37651/aujlps.2024.151992.1316
Al-Daghash, A. (The perspective of international liability for obligation for damage resulting from nuclear radiation leakage). , 2024; 14(Issue: 2 part 1): 529-557. doi: 10.37651/aujlps.2024.151992.1316
(The perspective of international liability for obligation for damage resulting from nuclear radiation leakage)
Journal of Anbar University for Law and Political Sciences
College of Law and Political Science/University of Kirkuk
Abstract
The international community is trying hard to reconcile the benefit of a thing with its harm, and establishes obligations and compensatory controls in the event that damage occurs from or because of the thing or by an active act that affects others, whether the damage is material or even moral to society, so what if the damage is nuclear radiation and its leakage is catastrophic for humanity and... Other creatures and life as a whole, and it affects areas where the extent of the damage cannot be predicted, or stop at a specific or designated place. Therefore, international responsibility takes on this issue that is dangerous to the entire world and at the same time beneficial to it. If used by legitimate, peaceful international means, the possibility of the international community to establish and define the basis of international responsibility, nuclear damage resulting from radiation and its leakage, and redress the damage with compensation that is at the level of the serious effects and disasters that caused the damage to the country or several countries, whether immediate or future, especially after the race. International use of nuclear weapons, whether military or peaceful, whether overt or secret. The International Atomic Energy Agency must activate its oversight, inspection and investigation of countries that own nuclear facilities, monitor all their activities, and take the highest levels of caution and caution regarding these facilities.