International Law MCQs 2010
Round off your preparation with this diverse set of International Law MCQs from the CSS 2010 exam. This collection challenges your grasp of jurisdictional principles, dispute resolution mechanisms, and significant 20th-century legal developments. The questions explore the ICJ’s jurisdiction based on state consent and the nuanced principles of territoriality and extra-territoriality that allow states to claim legal authority. You will analyze different forms of conflict and their resolution, from the 1965 Indo-Pakistan War and the Tashkent Declaration via mediation to the concepts of truce, reprisal, and retorsion. The set also covers landmark human rights and criminal law instruments, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Genocide Convention, and the Rome Statute establishing the ICC. This final practice set ensures you are well-versed in the practical application of international law in conflicts, human rights protection, and the functioning of modern international criminal justice.
Decision of arbitration is:
A. Binding on parties
B. Not binding
C. Partially binding
D. None of these
Indo-Pakistan conflict in 1965 was a:
A. Non-war Armed conflict
B. War
C. Just border conflict
D. None of these
Nationality of a woman as a result of marriage with a foreigner is:
A. Lost
B. Changed
C. Nothing is done
D. None of these
Tashkent declaration between India and Pakistan in 1966 by USSR was an example of ________.
A. Conciliation
B. Mediation
C. Arbitration
D. None of these
Geneva convention for POWs was signed in:
A. 1949
B. 1952
C. 1945
D. None of these
Armed attack on enemy fall under:
A. Retorsion
B. Reprisal
C. Intervention
D. None of these
Kellogg–Briand pact was signed in Paris in:
A. 1923
B. 1928
C. 1945
D. None of these
Universal declaration of Human rights was passed by:
A. Geneva Convention
B. Vienna Congress
C. UN General Assembly in 1948
D. None of these
Truce is:
A. Agreement of ceasefire
B. Peace treaty
C. Agreement of exchange of Prisoners of War
D. None of these
Concept of state will was first time given by:
A. Hegel
B. Grotious
C. Bynkershoek
D. None of these
