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Full-Text Articles in Law
Soviet Legal Education, John W. Hager
Soviet Legal Education, John W. Hager
Duquesne Law Review
The title of this article may imply to some readers that the subject matter of its contents will prove to be a broad, comprehensive, and analytical study of all phases of Soviet legal education. No such implication is intended by the particular title selected, and lest the reader be disappointed at a later point, he is warned here that any broad, all-inclusive inferences drawn from the title are neither accurate nor will they be justified by what follows. The author's purposes are much less ambitious and much more limited in number and in scope. By this article he proposes to …
The South-West Africa Judgment: A Study In Justiciability, Cornelius F. Murphy
The South-West Africa Judgment: A Study In Justiciability, Cornelius F. Murphy
Duquesne Law Review
According to Brierly, an international dispute is justiciable if it is "susceptible of decision by the application, in an arbitral or judicial process, of rules of law." It is widely believed that the number of disputes between states to which the judicial process can be applied is extremely limited. The individualistic basis of international jurisdiction and the prevalent political tensions contribute to a limited view of the possibilities of international adjudication. Yet there is a constant need to develop measures of peaceful settlement, and the recent judgment of the International Court of Justice in the South-West Africa cases has dramatically …
The Administration Of The Alberta New Towns Program, John R. Mcfarland
The Administration Of The Alberta New Towns Program, John R. Mcfarland
Duquesne Law Review
Canada is a country with vast unsettled regions and many untapped resources. In the past, as resources were exploited and industry developed in areas which had previously been open country, town building and settlement were left primarily to the industrial developer. The result was the development of what are often called "company towns," or "single-enterprise communities." Little part was played in the creation of these towns by real estate promoters, professional town planners, or governmental bodies. They were not built for philanthropic or idealistic purposes but were considered as "necessary evils." Although towns built in this manner have generally been …