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University of Michigan Law School

Military, War, and Peace

Michigan Law Review

Disarmament

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Crisis In Arms Control, Harold K. Jacobson May 1984

The Crisis In Arms Control, Harold K. Jacobson

Michigan Law Review

There is general agreement among observers of contemporary international affairs, and national and international officials from all sides, that there is a serious crisis in arms control. As of January 1984, the Soviet Union had broken off two major arms control negotiations: the Intermediate- Range Nuclear Force Talks (INF) and the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START). Negotiations in the United Nations Conference on Disarmament (CD) on a variety of arms control issues were stalemated. The United States was engaged in a large-scale military build up, and there was no sign that the Soviet Union would abate the extensive military programs …


Highway To Armageddon, Bernhard G. Bechhoefer Mar 1979

Highway To Armageddon, Bernhard G. Bechhoefer

Michigan Law Review

A Review of Nuclear Weapons and World Politics: Alternatives for the Future by David G. Compert, Michael Madelbaum, Richard L. Warwin, and John H. Burton


The Soviet-American Arms Race: A European Perspective, J. David Singer Mar 1979

The Soviet-American Arms Race: A European Perspective, J. David Singer

Michigan Law Review

A Review of The Game of Disarmament: How the U.S. & Russia Run the Arms Race by Alva Myrdal


Henkin: Arms Control And Inspection In American Law, Eric Stein Apr 1961

Henkin: Arms Control And Inspection In American Law, Eric Stein

Michigan Law Review

A Review of Arms Control and Inspection in American Law. By Louis Henkin. With a Foreword by Philip C. Jessup.


The United States And The League Of Nations, Clarence A. Berdahl Apr 1929

The United States And The League Of Nations, Clarence A. Berdahl

Michigan Law Review

With the ratification of the Treaty of Versailles by the necessary number of Powers on January 10, 1920, there came into existence that new experiment in international cooperation and government known as the League of Nations. It has grown from a membership of 43 states in 1920 to 55 in 1929. Including Great Powers and Small Powers, states of Europe, Asia, Africa, South, Central, and even North America, it can in no sense of the word be properly characterized as a European league merely, or another Holy Alliance, but is truly a world organization. Only Afghanistan, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, Russia, …


War Arbitration And Peace, William Perry Rogers Dec 1905

War Arbitration And Peace, William Perry Rogers

Michigan Law Review

In examining any question which pertains to the welfare of humanity there are two prominent view points from which to start. One is that of the individual being; the isolated man; the unit of society. The other is that of the mass of mankind; the people as a whole; the corporate organization of states and nations. There are those who believe in a God of nations. They believe He guides their destinies in perils of battle, and in great and dangerous emergencies; but they insist that He has little or nothing to do with the affairs of the individual. Conversely, …