Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Latin American Languages and Societies Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Latin American Languages and Societies
The Political Thought Of José María Luis Mora, 1794-1850, Morris L. Simon
The Political Thought Of José María Luis Mora, 1794-1850, Morris L. Simon
Latin American Studies ETDs
This work undertakes a study of some aspects of the thought of one man, Doctor José María Luis Mora, a Mexican liberal of the nineteenth century. Naturally, selection by the writer has narrowed considerably the scope of this study. Two factors have conditioned the choice of material from Dr. Mora's breadbasket of ideas: (1) its relevancy to the Mexico of Mora's day, and (2) its value in revealing Mora as a political thinker.
Non-Intervention As A Doctrine Of American International Public Law, Richard Edward Greenleaf
Non-Intervention As A Doctrine Of American International Public Law, Richard Edward Greenleaf
Latin American Studies ETDs
This research was aimed at a synthesized study of the genesis and evolution of the doctrine of non-intervention as an aspect of the public international law, but the setting had to be one of history and politics. An attempt will be made to confine discussion to the pertinent stages of the evolution of the doctrine by use of the case-study method.
The Theory Of Recognition In American International Law, Paige W. Christiansen
The Theory Of Recognition In American International Law, Paige W. Christiansen
Latin American Studies ETDs
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the juridical elements of the problem from the political, and to formulate rules which might reduce to a minimum the field of arbitrary decision by individual governments.