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3. Amicable in contradistinction to Compulsive Settlement of Dif- ferences
II. Negotiation
PAGE
3
4. In what Negotiation consists
5. International Commissions of Inquiry
6. Effect of Negotiation .
III. Good Offices and Mediation
7. Occasions for Good Offices and Mediation
8. Right and Duty of offering, requesting, and rendering Good
Offices and Mediation.
9. Good Offices in contradistinction to Mediation
10. Good Offices and Mediation according to the Hague Arbitration
Convention
11. Value of Good Offices and Mediation
IV. Arbitration
12. Conception of Arbitration
13. Treaty of Arbitration.
14. Who is to arbitrate ?.
15. On what Principles Arbitrators proceed and decide
16. Binding Force of Arbitral Verdict
17. What Differences can be decided by Arbitration
174. Arbitration under the Covenant of the League of Nations
18. Value of Arbitration
SECT.
V. Arbitration according to the Hague Convention
19. Arbitral Justice in general.
20. Arbitration Treaty and Appointment of Arbitrators
21. Procedure of, and before, the Arbitral Tribunal
22. Arbitral Award.
23. Binding Force of Awards
24. Award binding upon Parties only
25. Costs of Arbitration
25a. Arbitration by Summary Procedure
VI. The League of Nations and State Differences
256. The League of Nations as a Factor in State Differences
25c. The Duties of the League itself
25d. The Duty of Members involved in a Dispute: Inquiry by the
Council
25e. Inquiry by the Assembly
25f. The Proposed International Court of Justice
25g. Disputes in which non-Members are involved
CHAPTER II
COMPULSIVE SETTLEMENT OF STATE DIFFERENCES
26
28
29
32
33
34
35
37
38
I. On Compulsive Means of Settlement of State Differences in General
26. Conception and Kinds of Compulsive Means of Settlement
27. Compulsive Means in contradistinction to War
28. Compulsive Means in contradistinction to an Ultimatum and De-
monstrations
33. Conception of Reprisals in contradistinction to Retorsion
34. Reprisals admissible for all International Delinquencies .
35. Reprisals admissible for International Delinquencies only
36. Reprisals, by whom performed
41. Reprisals to be preceded by Negotiations and to be stopped
when Reparation is made
42. Reprisals during Peace in contradistinction to Reprisals during
50. Intervention in contradistinction to Participation in a Difference 58
51. Mode of Intervention.
52. Time of Intervention
VI. Economic Boycott
52a. The so-called Economic Boycott
59
60
61
57. War a Contention between States through Armed Forces
57a. Recent Developments affecting the Distinction between Armed
Forces and Civilians
58. War a Contention between States for the purpose of overpower-
ing each other
overpower
59. Civil War.
60. Guerilla War
III. The Laws of War
67. Origin of the Laws of War .
68. The most important Developments of the Laws of War
69. Binding Force of the Laws of War
IV. The Region of War
70. Region of War in contradistinction to Theatre of War
71. Particular Region of every War
72. Exclusion from Region of War through Neutralisation
73. Asserted Exclusion of the Baltic Sea from the Region of War
V. The Belligerents
74. Qualification to become a Belligerent (facultas bellandi) .
75. Possibility in contradistinction to Qualification to become a
Belligerent.
76. Insurgents as a Belligerent Power
76a. The Case of the Czecho-Slovaks.
77. Principal and Accessory Belligerent Parties
100
101
102
II. Effects of the Outbreak of War
97. General Effects of the Outbreak of War
98. Rupture of Diplomatic Intercourse and Consular Activity
99. Cancellation of Treaties
143
144
145
100. Precarious Position of Belligerents' Subjects on Enemy Territory
100a. Persona standi in judicio on Enemy Territory
147
150
101. Intercourse, especially Trading, between Subjects of Belli-
gerents
152
102. Position of Belligerents' Property in the Enemy State
102a. Effect of the Outbreak of War on Merchantmen
157
160
110. Lawful and Unlawful Means of Killing and Wounding Com-
115. Violence against non-Combatant Members of Armed Forces
173
116. Violence against Private Enemy Persons
117. Violence against the Head of the Enemy State and against
Officials in Important Positions
176