No branch of international law in time of war is more important to the lawyer and the private individual than the rules governing the effect of war on private rights, privileges, powers and immunities. The complexity of modern business has induced a vast extension of the provisions of the common law governing commercial intercourse with the enemy
Rather that re-enforcing sovereignty at the expense of international law, as TWAIL-ers currently adv...
In this compilation, the author deals with those sections of the Trading with the Enemy Act which re...
52 pagesBook review of : THE INTERNATIONALISTS: HOW A RADICAL PLAN TO OUTLAW WAR REMADE THE WORLD. O...
No branch of international law in time of war is more important to the lawyer and the private indivi...
This is a revision of a work first published in two volumes in 1922. In the process of revision it h...
The development of economic warfare, which has reached proportions never heretofore known, is eviden...
Perhaps it is unnecessary to do more than notice the appearance of a new edition of a book which bef...
This work is a commentary upon Articles 42-56 of the Hague Regulations of 1907, constituting section...
Olivier Corten’s The Law Against War is a comprehensive, meticulously-researched study of contempora...
THE first edition of this work was published in 1940. Within six years a new edition, three times a...
This is the fourth edition of a text-book first published in 1889, by a man who, as Judge-Advocate-G...
Book reviewLow reviews International Sale of Goods in the Conflict of Laws by James Fawcett, Jonatha...
This is an excellent monograph, well organized and balanced, on a so-called doctrine of internatio...
Under the auspices of the Research in International Law a committee of students of neutrality under ...
A marriage between intellectual property and private international law seems to have instant status ...
Rather that re-enforcing sovereignty at the expense of international law, as TWAIL-ers currently adv...
In this compilation, the author deals with those sections of the Trading with the Enemy Act which re...
52 pagesBook review of : THE INTERNATIONALISTS: HOW A RADICAL PLAN TO OUTLAW WAR REMADE THE WORLD. O...
No branch of international law in time of war is more important to the lawyer and the private indivi...
This is a revision of a work first published in two volumes in 1922. In the process of revision it h...
The development of economic warfare, which has reached proportions never heretofore known, is eviden...
Perhaps it is unnecessary to do more than notice the appearance of a new edition of a book which bef...
This work is a commentary upon Articles 42-56 of the Hague Regulations of 1907, constituting section...
Olivier Corten’s The Law Against War is a comprehensive, meticulously-researched study of contempora...
THE first edition of this work was published in 1940. Within six years a new edition, three times a...
This is the fourth edition of a text-book first published in 1889, by a man who, as Judge-Advocate-G...
Book reviewLow reviews International Sale of Goods in the Conflict of Laws by James Fawcett, Jonatha...
This is an excellent monograph, well organized and balanced, on a so-called doctrine of internatio...
Under the auspices of the Research in International Law a committee of students of neutrality under ...
A marriage between intellectual property and private international law seems to have instant status ...
Rather that re-enforcing sovereignty at the expense of international law, as TWAIL-ers currently adv...
In this compilation, the author deals with those sections of the Trading with the Enemy Act which re...
52 pagesBook review of : THE INTERNATIONALISTS: HOW A RADICAL PLAN TO OUTLAW WAR REMADE THE WORLD. O...