Sourcebook on Public International LawRoutledge, 1998 M02 14 - 920 pages First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company. |
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... accepted that this caesura was more profound than those of 1648 or 1815, which marked previous transformations of international law, adopted it to the changing character of the state systemwhichwas fashioned and conditioned bythe ...
... accepted that this caesura was more profound than those of 1648 or 1815, which marked previous transformations of international law, adopted it to the changing character of the state systemwhichwas fashioned and conditioned bythe ...
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... accepted legal discourse. So postmodernism is concernedwith unearthing difference, heterogeneity and conflict as realityin placeoffictional representationsof universality and consensus ... ... There is a contradiction within ...
... accepted legal discourse. So postmodernism is concernedwith unearthing difference, heterogeneity and conflict as realityin placeoffictional representationsof universality and consensus ... ... There is a contradiction within ...
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... accepted by municipallegal systems which recognise the limited companywhose capitalis represented by shares, and not to themunicipallaw of aparticular state, that international law refers. Inreferring to such rules, the Court ...
... accepted by municipallegal systems which recognise the limited companywhose capitalis represented by shares, and not to themunicipallaw of aparticular state, that international law refers. Inreferring to such rules, the Court ...
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... accepted as binding between nations, and the international law soughtto be applied must, like anythingelse, be proved bysatisfactory evidence, which must sheweitherthat the particular proposition putforwardhas been recognisedand acted ...
... accepted as binding between nations, and the international law soughtto be applied must, like anythingelse, be proved bysatisfactory evidence, which must sheweitherthat the particular proposition putforwardhas been recognisedand acted ...
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... accepted and adopted by our own domestic law. There isno external power that imposes its rule upon our owncode of substantive law or procedure. The Courts acknowledge the existence of a body or rules which nations accept amongst ...
... accepted and adopted by our own domestic law. There isno external power that imposes its rule upon our owncode of substantive law or procedure. The Courts acknowledge the existence of a body or rules which nations accept amongst ...
Contents
Refugee Convention 1951 | |
Treaty of Versailles | |
Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in | |
Art 10 | |
OtherCelestial Bodies1967 Treaty on the NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 | |
Resolution on Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources | |
Resolution on Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources | |
Art 47 | |
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Common terms and phrases
accepted accordance adopted aircraft andthe apply arbitration Area Article Assembly authority baselines breach bythe Charter claim coastal Commission committed concerned considered constitute continental shelf contracting Convention cooperation crime customary international law cyberspace Czechoslovakia decision Declaration diplomatic dispute Draft effect established exclusive economic zone exercise existence force foreign fromthe high seas Hungary ICJ Rep immunity independence international agreements International Law Commission international obligation international organisations internationallaw internationally wrongful inthe islands itis jurisdiction jus cogens means measures Minquiers mission norms object offence ofinternational ofstates ofthe onthe opinio juris parties PCIJ peace peremptory norm person practice principle procedure purposes question ratification recognised referred regard regulations relations relevant Resolution respect responsibility RIAA Secretary Security Council selfdetermination settlement shallbe ship sovereign sovereignty space Statute territorial sea thatthe theCourt thestate thetreaty tobe tothe treaty tribunal United Kingdom United Nations Western Sahara withthe