This article argues that, despite the eventual failure of the League to deliver the international disarmament that may believed would create peace, the early inter-war years showed signs of great promise. The League's early, often modest, efforts to establish the foundations of international disarmament, deserve greater credit than they are usually afforded because they have been overshadowed by the collapse of the World Disarmament Conference in 1934
Historical assessments of the 1907 Hague Peace Conference, like its 1899 predecessor, are usually fr...
This is the accepted version of the following article: David Lincove, "Data for Peace: The League of...
Item does not contain fulltextConference 'International Organization through Law? The League of Nati...
This article examines the six distinct varieties of disarmament pursued in the aftermath of the Firs...
In September 1925, the Assembly of the League of Nations called for the summoning of a global Confer...
The League of Nations was an international organization created at the Paris Peace Conference of 191...
The League of Nations, whose Covenant was voted on April 28, 1919 and was included in the Versailles...
The pursuit of disarmament was central to the work of the League of Nations throughout its existence...
The Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 are generally considered to mark the opening of the mod...
DISARMAMENT AS A MODERN PHENOMENON has its roots in the success and, more often, the failure of inte...
This chapter explores two ways in which the first Hague Peace Conference's context and work as a who...
Diplomatic formulas and approaches developed during the Versailles Conference were later taken into...
The article is a historical re-description of international legal debates concerning the ius ad bell...
The League of Nations has been ridiculed by historians and political scientists since its collapse i...
This article argues that disarmament negotiations in Geneva played an important but hitherto little ...
Historical assessments of the 1907 Hague Peace Conference, like its 1899 predecessor, are usually fr...
This is the accepted version of the following article: David Lincove, "Data for Peace: The League of...
Item does not contain fulltextConference 'International Organization through Law? The League of Nati...
This article examines the six distinct varieties of disarmament pursued in the aftermath of the Firs...
In September 1925, the Assembly of the League of Nations called for the summoning of a global Confer...
The League of Nations was an international organization created at the Paris Peace Conference of 191...
The League of Nations, whose Covenant was voted on April 28, 1919 and was included in the Versailles...
The pursuit of disarmament was central to the work of the League of Nations throughout its existence...
The Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 are generally considered to mark the opening of the mod...
DISARMAMENT AS A MODERN PHENOMENON has its roots in the success and, more often, the failure of inte...
This chapter explores two ways in which the first Hague Peace Conference's context and work as a who...
Diplomatic formulas and approaches developed during the Versailles Conference were later taken into...
The article is a historical re-description of international legal debates concerning the ius ad bell...
The League of Nations has been ridiculed by historians and political scientists since its collapse i...
This article argues that disarmament negotiations in Geneva played an important but hitherto little ...
Historical assessments of the 1907 Hague Peace Conference, like its 1899 predecessor, are usually fr...
This is the accepted version of the following article: David Lincove, "Data for Peace: The League of...
Item does not contain fulltextConference 'International Organization through Law? The League of Nati...