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Nemotron-Cascade-8B/evaluation/data/mmlu/flan_cot_fewshot/mmlu_international_law.yaml
ModelHub XC c979c18a17 初始化项目,由ModelHub XC社区提供模型
Model: nv-community/Nemotron-Cascade-8B
Source: Original Platform
2026-04-24 22:32:56 +08:00

71 lines
4.5 KiB
YAML

dataset_name: international_law
description: The following are multiple choice questions (with answers) about international
law.
fewshot_config:
sampler: first_n
samples:
- question: 'How the consent to be bound of a State may be expressed?
(A) The consent of a State to be bound is expressed only by ratification (B)
The consent of a state to be bound by a treaty may be expressed by signature,
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession (C) The consent of a State to
be bound is expressed by signature (D) The consent of a State to be bound is
expressed by whatever means they choose'
target: Let's think step by step. We refer to Wikipedia articles on international
law for help. Article 11 of Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties signed
in 1969 states that "the consent of a State to be bound by a treaty may be expressed
by signature, exchange of instruments constituting a treaty, ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession, or by any other means if so agreed." (B) is the most
precise and accurate answer. The answer is (B).
- question: 'What is the judge ad hoc?
(A) If a party to a contentious case before the ICJ does not have a national
sitting as judge, it is entitled to nominate someone as a judge solely for that
case, with the title of judge ad hoc (B) Judge ad hoc is the member of the bench
of the ICJ with a casting vote (C) Judge ad hoc is a surrogate judge, in case
a judge is disqualified or passes away (D) Judge ad hoc is the judge that each
party will always nominate in every contentious case'
target: Let's think step by step. We refer to Wikipedia articles on international
law for help. As "ad hoc" implies, a judge ad hoc is appointed only for a specific
case or period, when a party to a contentious case before the International
Court of Justice does not have a regular national sitting as judge. The answer
is (A).
- question: 'When ''consent'' can serve as a circumstance precluding the wrongfulness
of a State conduct?
(A) Consent can serve as a circumstance precluding the wrongfulness whenever
it is given (B) Consent can never serve as a circumstance precluding wrongfulness
(C) Consent can serve as a circumstance precluding wrongfulness, provided the
consent is valid and to the extent that the conduct remains within the limits
of the consent given (D) Consent can always serve as a circumstance precluding
wrongfulness, no matter which organ of the State gives it'
target: Let's think step by step. We refer to Wikipedia articles on international
law for help. Valid consent can serve as a circumstance precluding the wrongfulness
of a State conduct if the conduct remains within the limits of that consent,
according to Chapter V of the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful
Acts, 2001, United Nations. The answer is (C).
- question: 'Would a reservation to the definition of torture in the ICCPR be acceptable
in contemporary practice?
(A) This is an acceptable reservation if the reserving country''s legislation
employs a different definition (B) This is an unacceptable reservation because
it contravenes the object and purpose of the ICCPR (C) This is an unacceptable
reservation because the definition of torture in the ICCPR is consistent with
customary international law (D) This is an acceptable reservation because under
general international law States have the right to enter reservations to treaties'
target: Let's think step by step. We refer to Wikipedia articles on international
law for help. For it contravenes the object and purpose of the ICCPR, this is
an unacceptable reservation in contemporary practice. The answer is (B).
- question: 'What types of force does Article 2(4) of the UN Charter prohibit?
(A) Article 2(4) encompasses only armed force (B) Article 2(4) encompasses all
types of force, including sanctions (C) Article 2(4) encompasses all interference
in the domestic affairs of States (D) Article 2(4) encompasses force directed
only against a State''s territorial integrity'
target: 'Let''s think step by step. We refer to Wikipedia articles on international
law for help. Article 2(4) of the UN Charter prohibits states from using armed
forces in their international relations. The answer is (A).'
tag: mmlu_flan_cot_fewshot_humanities
include: _mmlu_flan_cot_fewshot_template_yaml
task: mmlu_flan_cot_fewshot_international_law