The League of NationsThe Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2003 - 251 страница A trenchant analysis of the League of Nations by one of the leading legal scholars of the day. Divided into two parts, the work begins with a general history of international relations since the Middle Ages. Other chapters examine earlier methods of international arbitration, the Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 and preliminary developments in the early 1900s that would later influence the league's character. Additional topics include the Congress of Vienna and the Alabama case. The second part examines the establishment of the league, then proceeds to an article-by-article commentary of its charter (or Covenant). Pollock also includes an appendix containing the texts of source materials and early drafts of the charter. Sir Frederick Pollock [1845-1937] was one of the greatest British judges and legal scholars of his day. His treatises on contracts, jurisprudence and other subjects did much to clarify and systematize English law. Several of these were standard texts that went through several editions. He is also remembered for his collaboration with F.W. Maitland on The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I and his correspondence with Oliver Wendell Holmes, which was published posthumously as The Holmes-Pollock Letters. xv, 251 pp. |
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... Britain with France and the U.S. PAGE 24 25 28 30 31 32 33 34 34 36 39 40 Note C. - Peace Commission treaty between Great Britain and the U.S. 43 CHAPTER III . THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL . The Peace Conference of 1899 of 1907 The Convention as ...
... Britain , Prussia , and Russia ; and a moral duty to maintain peace in Europe on the founda- tion of the settlement then made was understood to rest on those Powers . No regular method was provided for securing agreement or resolving ...
... Britain and the United States in settling a really dangerous controversy . Then , early in the twentieth century , France and Great Britain concluded a treaty providing in general terms for the P. 2 METHODS OF INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION .
Frederick Pollock. Britain concluded a treaty providing in general terms for the reference of future disputes to ... Britain and the United States came to such an agreement , in which the novel feature was the consideration by a ...
... Britain , deriving title from Holland , and Venezuela , deriving title from Spain , there was no principle of law nor of general usage in dispute . Not legal but historical uncertainty made the decision troublesome ; the territory in ...