The American Journal of International Law, Volume 63American Society of International Law, 1969 - Electronic journals The American Journal of International Law has been published quarterly since 1907 and is considered the premier English-language scholarly journal in its field. It features scholarly articles and editorials, notes and comment by preeminent scholars on developments in international law and international relations, and reviews of contemporary developments. The Journal contains summaries of decisions by national and international courts and arbitral and other tribunals, and of contemporary U.S. practice in international law. Each issue lists recent publications in English and other languages, many of which are reviewed in depth. Throughout its history, and particularly during first sixty years, the Journal has published full-text primary materials of particular importance in the field of international law. The contents of the current issue of the Journal are available on the ASIL web site. |
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Page 789
... treaty may depend not only on whether the treaty had formerly been applied to its territory , but also on interpretation of the treaty as to whether its application must be limited to particular political entities . In any event , where ...
... treaty may depend not only on whether the treaty had formerly been applied to its territory , but also on interpretation of the treaty as to whether its application must be limited to particular political entities . In any event , where ...
Page 883
... treaty enters into force as soon as consent to be bound by the treaty has been established for all the negotiating states . 3. When the consent of a state to be bound by a treaty is established on a date after the treaty has come into ...
... treaty enters into force as soon as consent to be bound by the treaty has been established for all the negotiating states . 3. When the consent of a state to be bound by a treaty is established on a date after the treaty has come into ...
Page 889
... treaty , shall not in any way impair the duty of any state to fulfil any obliga- tion embodied in the treaty to which it would be subject under inter- national law independently of the treaty . ARTICLE 44 Separability of treaty ...
... treaty , shall not in any way impair the duty of any state to fulfil any obliga- tion embodied in the treaty to which it would be subject under inter- national law independently of the treaty . ARTICLE 44 Separability of treaty ...
Contents
EcuadoreanPeruvian Boundary Dispute Georg Maier | 28 |
Communist China and the Law of the Sea Tao Cheng | 47 |
The Time Element in the Contentious Proceedings in the Inter | 74 |
Copyright | |
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action agreement aircraft aircraft hijacking amendment American application arbitration areas Article Assembly authority Beirut boundary Charter China Claims Relating coastal Commission Committee Communist concerned Conference constitutional continental shelf Continental Shelf Convention Contracting countries customary international law decision Declaration delimitation dispute documents draft economic Ecuador effect enforcement equidistance Federal Republic fishing force foreign Geneva Convention Government hijacking hoc judges human rights Ibid Index International Court international law International Law Commission interpretation Israel issue judgment jurisdiction limits ment Namibia negotiations nuclear weapons obligations opinion organization paragraph parties peaceful Peru political present President principle problem Professor proposed Protocol provisions question refugees regard Report rescue resolution respect rĂ´le Security Council sedentary fisheries settlement Society of International South West Africa Soviet Union status territorial sea tion tional treaty Treaty Series tribunal Trusteeship United Kingdom United Nations United Nations Charter University vote