Texts of the Peace Conferences at the Hague, 1899 and 1907: With English Translation and Appendix of Related DocumentsJames Brown Scott Pub. for the International School of Peace, Ginn, 1908 - 447 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page x
... have been debated and en- forced ; and finally , from the court room international law has made its way to the people , who , in last resort , dominate court and cabinet , and enlist in their service scholar as well as priest . It was a ...
... have been debated and en- forced ; and finally , from the court room international law has made its way to the people , who , in last resort , dominate court and cabinet , and enlist in their service scholar as well as priest . It was a ...
Page xii
... have the usages of enlightened nations . These usages spread , gain weight and influence by repeated application . We next find that the usages have taken on the form of custom , and nations from isolated or frequent usage regard the ...
... have the usages of enlightened nations . These usages spread , gain weight and influence by repeated application . We next find that the usages have taken on the form of custom , and nations from isolated or frequent usage regard the ...
Page xvii
... have been in an intrenched position ; for he could have insisted that this matter , being a question of fact , be submitted to a commission of inquiry ready for constitu- tion under rules of procedure accepted by civilized nations . I ...
... have been in an intrenched position ; for he could have insisted that this matter , being a question of fact , be submitted to a commission of inquiry ready for constitu- tion under rules of procedure accepted by civilized nations . I ...
Page xviii
... have been submitted to the Hague Tribunal , have been adjudicated and the judgments cheerfully and promptly accepted by the litigating nations . Nations appeared before the bar as suitors and resorted to law instead of force . The court ...
... have been submitted to the Hague Tribunal , have been adjudicated and the judgments cheerfully and promptly accepted by the litigating nations . Nations appeared before the bar as suitors and resorted to law instead of force . The court ...
Page xix
... have been a success had it demon- strated nothing more than the possibility of the representatives of forty - four nations to live in peace and quiet during four months . If it had done nothing more than to bring these representatives ...
... have been a success had it demon- strated nothing more than the possibility of the representatives of forty - four nations to live in peace and quiet during four months . If it had done nothing more than to bring these representatives ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adhere agreed agreement armed armies armistice arms army ARTICLE 7 August 22 authority bellig belligérants belligerent capture captured certifiée conforme contracting powers country Cour permanente d'Arbitrage Court of Arbitration customs declaration Delegate Plenipotentiary Délégué Plénipotentiaire denunciation diplomatic channel duly certified enemy Excellency following Foreign Affairs general given Gouvernement des Pays-Bas great guerre Hague Haye His Excellency His Majesty His Royal Highness hospital hostile hostile country individuals international judges King of Prussia made Majesty the King make means measures ment military Ministre national naval necessary Nether Netherland Government neutral power notification occupied order paragraph party Pays-Bas Peace Conference Permanent Court Pléni Plénipoten present convention President principles prisoners prisoners of war prize provisions Puissances contractantes purpose received remain right rules same sances sanitary settlement ships sick and wounded signed SSSSSSS subject take taken Technical Delegate territory tiaires time tion Tribunal troops United States unless vention vessels year
Popular passages
Page 190 - The present Convention shall be ratified as soon as possible. The ratifications shall be deposited at The Hague. The first deposit of ratifications...
Page 240 - Convention de leurs signatures. Fait à La Haye, le dix-huit octobre mil neuf cent sept, en un seul exemplaire qui restera déposé dans les archives [du Gouvernement des Pays-Bas et dont des copies certifiées conformes, seront remises par la voie diplomatique aux Puissances contractantes.
Page 329 - Conference, as well as to the other powers which have adhered to the convention. In the cases contemplated in the preceding paragraph, the said Government shall inform them at the same time of the date on which it received the notification. ARTICLE 11 Non-signatory powers may adhere to the present convention.
Page 52 - Prisoners of war are in the power of the hostile Government, but not in that of the individuals or corps who captured them. They must be humanely treated. All their personal belongings, except arms, horses, and military papers, remain their property.
Page 201 - Puissances non signataires sont admises à adhérer à la présente Convention. La Puissance qui désire adhérer notifie par écrit son intention au Gouvernement des Pays-Bas en lui transmettant l'acte d'adhésion qui sera déposé dans les archives dudit Gouvernement. Ce Gouvernement transmettra immédiatement à toutes les autres Puissances copie certifiée conforme de la notification ainsi que de l'acte d'adhésion, en indiquant la date à laquelle il a reçu la notification.
Page 169 - Dans les questions d'ordre juridique et, en premier lieu, dans les questions d'interprétation ou d'application des Conventions internationales, l'arbitrage est reconnu par les Puissances Contractantes comme le moyen le plus efficace et en même temps le plus équitable de régler les litiges qui n'ont pas été résolus par les voies diplomatiques.
Page 27 - Commissions internationales d'enquête. ART. 9. — Dans les litiges d'ordre international n'engageant ni l'honneur ni des intérêts essentiels et provenant d'une divergence d'appréciation sur des points de fait, les puissances signataires jugent utile que les parties qui n'auraient pu se mettre d'accord par les voies diplomatiques instituent, en tant que les circonstances le permettront, une Commission internationale d'enquête...
Page 51 - Les lois, les droits et les devoirs de la guerre ne s'appliquent pas seulement à l'armée, mais encore aux milices et aux corps de volontaires réunissant les conditions suivantes: 1. d'avoir à leur tête une personne responsable pour ses subordonnés; 2.
Page 31 - Chaque puissance signataire désignera, dans les trois mois qui suivront la ratification par elle du présent acte, quatre personnes au plus, d'une compétence reconnue dans les questions de droit international, jouissant de la plus haute considération morale et disposées à accepter les fonctions d'arbitres.
Page 175 - Contractantes considèrent comme un devoir, dans le cas où un conflit aigu menacerait d'éclater entre deux ou plusieurs d'entre Elles, de rappeler à celles-ci que la Cour Permanente leur est ouverte. En conséquence, Elles déclarent que le fait de rappeler aux Parties en conflit les dispositions de la présente Convention, et le conseil donné, dans l'intérêt supérieur de la paix, de s'adresser à la Cour Permanente, ne peuvent être considérés que comme actes de bons offices.