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Full-Text Articles in Law
International Law As A Process, Louis B. Sohn
International Law As A Process, Louis B. Sohn
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Problems and Process: International Law and How We Use It by Rosalyn Higgins
The Uncitral Framework For Arbitration In Contemporary Perspective, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
The Uncitral Framework For Arbitration In Contemporary Perspective, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The UNCITRAL Framework for Arbitration in Contemporary Perspective by Isaak I. Dore
The Age Of Rights, Stephen D. Sencer
The Age Of Rights, Stephen D. Sencer
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Age of Rights by Louis Henkin
The United Nations, International Law, And The Rhodesian Independence Crisis, Gary A. Macdonald
The United Nations, International Law, And The Rhodesian Independence Crisis, Gary A. Macdonald
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The United Nations, International Law, and the Rhodesian Independence Crisis by Jericho Nkala
The Lawful Rights Of Mankind: An Introduction To The International Legal Code Of Human Rights, Alexander W. Joel
The Lawful Rights Of Mankind: An Introduction To The International Legal Code Of Human Rights, Alexander W. Joel
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Lawful Rights of Mankind: An Introduction to the International Legal Code of Human Rights by Paul Sieghart
Wainhouse: International Peace Observation-A History And Forecast, D. V. Sandifer
Wainhouse: International Peace Observation-A History And Forecast, D. V. Sandifer
Michigan Law Review
A Review of International Peace Observation-a History and Forecast By David W. Wainhouse in association with Bernhard G. Bechhoefer, John C. Dreier, Benjamin Gerig and Harry R. Turkel.
Falk & Mendlovitz: The Strategy Of World Order, Rosalyn Higgins
Falk & Mendlovitz: The Strategy Of World Order, Rosalyn Higgins
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Strategy of World Order. 4 vols Edited by Richard A. Falk and Saul H. Mendlovitz
The Law-Making Treaties Of The International Telecommunication Union Through Time And In Space, J. Henry Glazer
The Law-Making Treaties Of The International Telecommunication Union Through Time And In Space, J. Henry Glazer
Michigan Law Review
On the twenty-fifth of June, the Government of the United States of America received an invitation to attend in Russia a conference of plenipotentiaries to consider the revision of an important multilateral convention. Since the conference involved matters which, by American municipal practice, were solely within the competence of private enterprise and not subject to the control of government, the United States at first refused to attend. Russia, however, assured the United States that representatives of private enterprises would be welcome. Relations between these two countries were on such a friendly basis that the United States accepted the invitation extended …
Moskowitz: Human Rights And World Order. The Struggle For Human Rights In The United Nations, Egon Schwelb
Moskowitz: Human Rights And World Order. The Struggle For Human Rights In The United Nations, Egon Schwelb
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Human Rights and World Order. The Struggle for Human Rights in the United Nations. By Moses Moskowitz.
Atoms For Peace: The New International Atomic Energy Agency, Bernhard G. Bechhoefer, Eric Stein
Atoms For Peace: The New International Atomic Energy Agency, Bernhard G. Bechhoefer, Eric Stein
Michigan Law Review
On October 26, 1956 seventy states signed an international agreement described as the Statute of an International Atomic Energy Agency. This signing followed a conference of over a month in which eighty-two states participated. All of the participating states supported the text which resulted from this conference-a truly remarkable result considering that the subject of the conference was atomic energy with its far-reaching international security implications.
International Law-Trusteeship Compared With Mandate, Donald S. Leeper S. Ed.
International Law-Trusteeship Compared With Mandate, Donald S. Leeper S. Ed.
Michigan Law Review
The mandate system represented an attempt to cope with the problem of nonself-governing territories as an international responsibility and, for the most part, was an advancement over former methods of treatment. The system was not perfect and its operation pointed up a number of its defects. The framers of the United Nations Charter formulated the trusteeship system to take the place of the mandate system, correcting its defects and adding certain innovations. The purpose of this comment is to present a brief comparison of the two systems and to consider a few of the major problems presented.
Van Doren: The Great Rehearsal, Michigan Law Review
Van Doren: The Great Rehearsal, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of THE GREAT REHEARSAL. By Carl Van Doren.