The American Journal of International Law, Svazek 2American Society of International Law, 1908 The American Journal of International Law has been published quarterly since 1907 and is considered the premier English-language scholarly journal in its field. It features scholarly articles and editorials, notes and comment by preeminent scholars on developments in international law and international relations, and reviews of contemporary developments. The Journal contains summaries of decisions by national and international courts and arbitral and other tribunals, and of contemporary U.S. practice in international law. Each issue lists recent publications in English and other languages, many of which are reviewed in depth. Throughout its history, and particularly during first sixty years, the Journal has published full-text primary materials of particular importance in the field of international law. The contents of the current issue of the Journal are available on the ASIL web site. |
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Strana 16
... powers , and shall only affect them after the receipt of a notification , which may be sent even by telegram . However , neutral powers cannot invoke the benefit of the absence of notification if it is established that the neutral powers ...
... powers , and shall only affect them after the receipt of a notification , which may be sent even by telegram . However , neutral powers cannot invoke the benefit of the absence of notification if it is established that the neutral powers ...
Strana 19
... powers engage to do everything in their power to remove , each for himself , the mines . which it has placed . As to anchored automatic contact mines which one of the belligerents has placed along the coast of the other , their ...
... powers engage to do everything in their power to remove , each for himself , the mines . which it has placed . As to anchored automatic contact mines which one of the belligerents has placed along the coast of the other , their ...
Strana 21
... powers such as Great Britain , France , Russia and Japan were unwilling to relinquish this means of bringing the enemy to terms . A convention negotiated by powers having no great maritime interest might be a moral victory ; it would ...
... powers such as Great Britain , France , Russia and Japan were unwilling to relinquish this means of bringing the enemy to terms . A convention negotiated by powers having no great maritime interest might be a moral victory ; it would ...
Strana 24
... powers were without a regulation on the subject . The re - enactment provided that the pres- ent declaration shall extend , not merely for a period of five years , but to the end of the Third Conference of Peace . It is difficult to say ...
... powers were without a regulation on the subject . The re - enactment provided that the pres- ent declaration shall extend , not merely for a period of five years , but to the end of the Third Conference of Peace . It is difficult to say ...
Strana 25
... powers from negotiating individual and separate treaties and thus accomplish indirectly and beyond the confines of The Hague what might and would have been accomplished but for the determined opposition of two great but unconverted powers ...
... powers from negotiating individual and separate treaties and thus accomplish indirectly and beyond the confines of The Hague what might and would have been accomplished but for the determined opposition of two great but unconverted powers ...
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