Results 301 to 310 of about 1,306,579 (337)
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Modern & Contemporary France, 1996
Van Kley, D., ed., The French Idea of Freedom: The Old Regime and the Declaration of Rights of 1789 (Stanford University Press, 1994), 436pp., £35, ISBN 0 8047 2355 9 Lucas, C., ed., with Baker, K. and Furet, F., The French Revolution and the Creation of Modern Political Culture. Volume 2: The Political Culture of the Revolution (Pergamon Press, 1988),
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Van Kley, D., ed., The French Idea of Freedom: The Old Regime and the Declaration of Rights of 1789 (Stanford University Press, 1994), 436pp., £35, ISBN 0 8047 2355 9 Lucas, C., ed., with Baker, K. and Furet, F., The French Revolution and the Creation of Modern Political Culture. Volume 2: The Political Culture of the Revolution (Pergamon Press, 1988),
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Blackfriars, 1923
To start with this title is to suggest perhaps wherein lies the cause of dispute in the long discussions that have ranged round the meaning and significance of the Jus Gentium; for it is a mistranslation to give law as the English equivalent of the Latin jus.
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To start with this title is to suggest perhaps wherein lies the cause of dispute in the long discussions that have ranged round the meaning and significance of the Jus Gentium; for it is a mistranslation to give law as the English equivalent of the Latin jus.
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‘National Antiquities’ and the Law
The Journal of Legal History, 2007National museums, housing ‘national antiquities’, were a nineteenth-century cultural phenomenon throughout Europe. In the United Kingdom, they afforded the Treasury a means of preserving relics of antiquity claimed as treasure trove. While satisfying the desire of the scientific community for the preservation of archaeological finds, and national ...
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On Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations [PDF]
* This is the revised text of a lecture delivered on 18 January 2007 to mark the tercentenary of the fi rst chair of law at the University of Edinburgh, the Regius Chair of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations. The writer has held the Regius Chair since 1972. A. INTRODUCTION: QUESTIONS OF WAR AND PEACE B. SOME HASTY HISTORY (1) The Regius Chair
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The Law of Humanity and the Law of Nations
2006The nineteenth-century doctrines known as “international law” developed out of the eighteenth century “law of nations” which itself grew out of seventeenth-century “ius gentium.”1 Each semantic shift reflected slight changes in scholarly attitudes towards the supranational legal order.
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2015
...These conflicting programs and their rival natural law discourses had been driven by the great religious and political conflicts of the seventeenth century, whose carry-over into the eighteenth century makes it into something of a "long seventeenth century." It is thus necessary to begin by discussing the works and contexts of some of the ...
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...These conflicting programs and their rival natural law discourses had been driven by the great religious and political conflicts of the seventeenth century, whose carry-over into the eighteenth century makes it into something of a "long seventeenth century." It is thus necessary to begin by discussing the works and contexts of some of the ...
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2016
This chapter explores the concept of supranationality and how it interplays with national laws within an economic integration setting, using the European Union experience as a case study. It then situates supranationality, direct applicability and direct effect within the ECOWAS legal regime.
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This chapter explores the concept of supranationality and how it interplays with national laws within an economic integration setting, using the European Union experience as a case study. It then situates supranationality, direct applicability and direct effect within the ECOWAS legal regime.
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The Relationship of Community Law to National Law
International Journal of Law Libraries, 1977The European Communities, with their sovereign rights in special areas, disrupt the trend toward exclusive territorial rights of the national states and, in this way, reflect a new development in international law.
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American Journal of International Law, 1994
As the United Nations system approaches its fiftieth anniversary, there is good reason to take a fresh view of its contribution to legal order in the contemporary world. That contribution has rarely been assessed in its full generality. A half century of law creation and application by the United Nations and its specialized agencies has produced a ...
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As the United Nations system approaches its fiftieth anniversary, there is good reason to take a fresh view of its contribution to legal order in the contemporary world. That contribution has rarely been assessed in its full generality. A half century of law creation and application by the United Nations and its specialized agencies has produced a ...
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