International Law: Cases and Materials |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 136
... regarded a treaty as binding only upon ratification , but with the ratification given retroactive effect to the date of sig- nature . Thus Moore wrote in 5 International Law 244 ( 1906 ) that " A treaty is binding on the contracting ...
... regarded a treaty as binding only upon ratification , but with the ratification given retroactive effect to the date of sig- nature . Thus Moore wrote in 5 International Law 244 ( 1906 ) that " A treaty is binding on the contracting ...
Page 454
... regarded as punishable under its legislation . Thus Great Brit- ain refused the request of the United States for the extradition of John Anderson , a British seaman who had committed homicide on board an American vessel , stating that ...
... regarded as punishable under its legislation . Thus Great Brit- ain refused the request of the United States for the extradition of John Anderson , a British seaman who had committed homicide on board an American vessel , stating that ...
Page 785
... regarded as commencing with the commission of the first act of force by a state with the intention of making war , or with the first such act of force committed without intent to make war but which is regarded as an act of war by the ...
... regarded as commencing with the commission of the first act of force by a state with the intention of making war , or with the first such act of force committed without intent to make war but which is regarded as an act of war by the ...
Contents
Table of Chapters | xxvii |
Selected Brief Bibliography | xliii |
Nature Sources and Applications of International Law | 3 |
Copyright | |
23 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
according action agreement alien American apply arbitration Article authority Brit Britain British citizens claim claimant Commission Conference Constitution Consul continental shelf contracting parties Convention damage decision declared Department diplomatic dispute duty effect established executive exercise existence fact force foreign government Germany Hackworth Hague Harvard Law School held high seas immunity infra International Law International Law Commission Italian Italy jurisdiction Justice law of nations League of Nations legislation Liechtenstein Lithuania Majesty's Government ment Mexican Mexico Moore national law Netherlands NOTE obligations officer opinion Organization Peace person President principles of international protection provisions question Quoted with permission ratification recognition recognized regarded relations Republic reservation respect rules of international ship sovereign sovereign immunity sovereignty Soviet Stat statute Supp supra ternational territorial sea territorial waters tion tional treaty Treaty of Versailles tribunal United Kingdom United Nations vessel violation Y.B. Intl