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Full-Text Articles in Law

International Humanitarian Assistance The Right To Life In International Law The Right To Food, L C. Green Oct 1988

International Humanitarian Assistance The Right To Life In International Law The Right To Food, L C. Green

Dalhousie Law Journal

When the international community first became interested in the problem of human rights during the second world war and then enunciated those rights in a series of international instruments, there was a tendency among writers to deal with the issue as a comprehensive whole. Now, however, it has become increasingly popular for authors to deal with a specific right to the exclusion of all others.


International Law And The Developing Countries, Jeremy Thomas Oct 1988

International Law And The Developing Countries, Jeremy Thomas

Dalhousie Law Journal

Professor Anand over the past two-and-a-half decades has established himself as one of the leading Third World publicists of international law. Less rhetorical than some, but just as vigorous, he has championed the development of a new international law based on cooperation in rejection of the old traditional and "Eurocentric" international law. In International Law and the Developing Countries Professor Anand brings together a collection of his previously published essays and wields them into a book for the purpose of evaluating "the traditional law and the process of change that it is undergoing to become a communal law of mankind".


Maximilien Bibaud, 1823-1887: The Pioneer Teacher Of International Law In Canada, R Stj Macdonald Mar 1988

Maximilien Bibaud, 1823-1887: The Pioneer Teacher Of International Law In Canada, R Stj Macdonald

Dalhousie Law Journal

Maximilien Bibaud was a most unusual man: student of philosophy, history, and literature, teacher, author, chronicler and reformer of the law, founder of the first organized law school in Canada, true pioneer of the teaching of international law in this country. Insolently but exhilaratingly new in both his ideas and his techniques for legal education, Bibaud was far in advance of his time. As we mark the centenary of his death in 1987, his interests and achievements are as relevant today as they were when he opened his law school 136 years ago.


Costa Rica's Permanent Neutrality And The Inter-American System, Héctor Gros Espiell Mar 1988

Costa Rica's Permanent Neutrality And The Inter-American System, Héctor Gros Espiell

Dalhousie Law Journal

Costa Rica's permanent neutrality was proclaimed on November 17, 1983. Costa Rica is the only Latin American State with a legal regime of permanent neutrality, as well as the single Member State of the Organization of American States which is also a Party to the Inter- American Treaty for Reciprocal Assistance (Rio de Janeiro, 1947), which has adopted permanent neutrality as a guiding principle of its foreign policy.